Australian Antarctic Gazetteer Information: This search contains results from the official Australian component of the SCAR Composite Gazetteer but it also includes Australia's subantarctic islands.
Showing 561 to 580 of 2938 place names. On page 29 of 147, go to the Previous Page or Next Page
| Name | Latitude | Longitude | Feature Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crane Cove (AUS) | 66° 16' 44.8" S | 110° 31' 32.2" E | Cove |
|
Name ID: 367
Place ID: 3085
A small bay to the south of Budnick Hill in the southern part of Newcomb Bay, Windmill Islands. Delineated from air photographs taken by USN Operation Highjump (1956-57). Named by USACAN for Robert I. Crane electronics technician 3D Class. This feature is also known, unofficially, as Shannon Bay. |
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| Cranfield Icefalls (AUS) | 79° 55' 59.9" S | 159° 40' 00.1" E | Icefall |
|
Name ID: 744
Place ID: 3087
A series of about eight spectacular icefalls, in an east-west line, falling steeply into the narrowest portion of Darwin Glacier near its mouth. Named by the Darwin Glacier Party of the TAE (1956-58) after W J Cranfield, a member of the Darwin Glacier Party. |
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| Crescent Lake (AUS) | 68° 38' 02.4" S | 78° 26' 56.4" E | Water body |
|
Name ID: 1255
Place ID: 3114
A crescent shaped lake in the Vestfold Hills measuring about 300 m by 75 m on an ice covered moraine. |
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| Crick Buttress (AUS) | 53° 08' 49.2" S | 73° 32' 11.0" E | Buttress |
|
Name ID: 228
Place ID:
A steep rock buttress running south from Budd Ridge to the nivi of the Fiftyone Glacier, Heard Island. |
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| Crippen Rock (AUS) | 67° 00' 14.4" S | 142° 39' 12.4" E | Offshore rock |
|
Name ID: 138215
Place ID: 19834
A rock in the Mackellar Islands lying to the north and north-west of Cape Denison, on the coast of George V Land. Discovered by AAE (1911-14) under Sir Douglas Mawson, who named the group of islands after C.D. Mackellar of London, a patron of the expedition. |
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| Crocodile Island (AUS) | 68° 49' 54.0" S | 77° 49' 07.0" E | Island |
|
Name ID: 138174
Place ID: 19794
"Named in recognition of its distinctive shape, with a long and thin western promontory reminiscent of a crocodile jaw." |
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| Crohn Island (AUS) | 67° 07' 00.1" S | 50° 46' 59.9" E | Island |
|
Name ID: 1045
Place ID: 3130
An island in Amundsen Bay, Enderby Land, just east of Beaver Island. Discovered in 1956 by an airborne field party led by Peter W Crohn, after whom it was named. |
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| Crohn Massif (AUS) | 70° 28' 00.0" S | 64° 55' 00.0" E | Massif |
|
Name ID: 1311
Place ID: 3131
A large, domed massif west of Mt Kirkby in the Porthos Range, Prince Charles Mountains. It is approximately 7 km long east-west and 4 km wide, rising about 460 m above the surrounding plateau. It is not visible from the east or north-east. There are two small conical peaks of the eastern extremity. Sighted by the ANARE southern party, led by William G Bewsher, in January 1957, and named after Peter W Crohn, geologist at Mawson in 1955 and 1956. |
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| Cronk Islands (AUS) | 66° 19' 00.1" S | 110° 26' 00.0" E | Island |
|
Name ID: 834
Place ID: 3138
A group of islands, north-east of Hollin Island, Windmill Islands. The region was photographed by USN Operation Highjump (1946-47), ANARE (1956 & 1962) and the Soviet Antarctic Expedition (1956). Named after C Cronk, glaciologist at Wilkes in 1958. |
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| Crooked Fjord (AUS) | 68° 39' 18.0" S | 78° 03' 09.0" E | Fjord |
|
Name ID: 429
Place ID: 7845
Crooked Fjord is a marine inlet extending from Omega Cove to the western extent of Mule Peninsula, a length of about 11km long. It lies between the Sørsdal Glacier and Mule Peninsula, in the southern part of the Vestfold Hills. |
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| Crooked Island (AUS) | 67° 01' 42.6" S | 57° 53' 51.0" E | Island |
|
Name ID: 1043
Place ID: 7846
An irregular-shaped island about 2 km across in the centre of a group of islands about 9 km ESE of the Øygarden Group, off Kemp Land. |
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| Crooked Lake (AUS) | 68° 37' 01.2" S | 78° 22' 55.2" E | Water body |
|
Name ID: 1271
Place ID: 7847
An irregularly shaped lake about 5 km long in the south-east part of the Vestfold Hills. Mapped as two lakes by Norwegian cartographers from aerial photographs taken by the Lars Christensen Expedition (1936-37) and called Krokvatnet (The Crooked Lake) and Nyrevatnet (The Kidney Lake). |
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| Crosby Nunataks (AUS) | 66° 46' 00.1" S | 51° 34' 00.1" E | Nunatak |
|
Name ID: 1749
Place ID: 3144
A group of nunataks in the Tula Mountains, Enderby Land, about 3 km north-east of Mount Morrison. Plotted from air photographs taken by ANARE in 1956. Named after W E Crosby, a member of the crew of the Discovery during BANZARE (1929-31). |
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| Cruise Nunatak (AUS) | 72° 59' 33.0" S | 69° 03' 59.0" E | Nunatak |
|
Name ID: 1748
Place ID: 3168
A high, ice-capped feature, with exposed rock on the steep eastern ridge, about 19 km east of Hay Hills on the Mawson Escarpment, Mac.Robertson Land. Photographed by ANARE in 1956 and 1960. A fuel depot was established nearby during the ANARE Prince Charles Mountains survey in 1972. Named after John Cruise, miner at Mawson in 1971. |
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| Crystal Pond (AUS) | 68° 37' 36.1" S | 78° 25' 03.4" E | Water body |
|
Name ID: 2216
Place ID: 3183
A small pond in the Vestfold Hills approximately 20 m in diameter on an ice covered moraine. There is a prominent ice cliff on the eastern side. The surface freezes to form long needles or crystals of ice. |
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| Cumberland Tarn (AUS) | 54° 38' 35.5" S | 158° 51' 14.4" E | Water body |
| Name ID: 2659 Place ID: | |||
| Cumpston Massif (AUS) | 73° 36' 00.0" S | 66° 48' 00.0" E | Massif |
|
Name ID: 1309
Place ID: 3200
A prominent, flat-topped rock outcrop, about 2,070 m high, 14.5 km long and 7-13 km wide, at the junction of the Lambert and Mellor Glaciers in Mac.Robertson Land. Discovered in November, 1956, from an ANARE aircraft. Named for Dr J S Cumpston (then) of the Aust Dept of External Affairs who, with E P Bayliss, was responsible for the map of Ant. pub. in 1939 by the (then) Property and Survey Branch, Dept of the Interior, Canberra. |
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| Currituck Island (AUS) | 66° 03' 48.0" S | 100° 40' 28.0" E | Island |
|
Name ID: 1065
Place ID: 3213
An island of rock and ice at the western end of Highjump Archipelago, north of the Bunger Hills. Delineated from air photographs taken by USN Operation Highjump (1946-47). |
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| Cutcliffe Peak (AUS) | 70° 31' 59.9" S | 65° 16' 59.9" E | Peak |
|
Name ID: 1949
Place ID: 3222
A peak just south of Mount Mervyn in the Porthos Range, Prince Charles Mountains. Plotted from ANARE air photographs. |
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| Cyclops Peak (AUS) | 68° 01' 00.1" S | 55° 37' 59.9" E | Peak |
|
Name ID: 1950
Place ID: 3229
A peak in the north-east part of the Dismal Mountains, Kemp Land, which is marked by a large round patch of light-coloured rock, visible from the north-west around to the east. Photographed in 1956 by ANARE. Surveyed by G A Knuckey in December 1958, during a dog-sledge journey from Amundsen Bay to Mawson. So named because the light-coloured patch brings to mind the mythical one-eyed giant, Cyclops. |
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Showing 561 to 580 of 2938 place names. On page 29 of 147, go to the Previous Page or Next Page