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Alexander Island

Alexander Island, which is also known as Alexander I Island, Alexander I Land, Alexander Land, Alexander I Archipelago, and Zemlja Alexandra I, is the largest island of Antarctica. It lies in the Bellingshausen Sea west of Palmer Land, Antarctic Peninsula from which it is separated by Marguerite Bay and George VI Sound. The George VI Ice Shelf entirely fills George VI Sound and connects Alexander Island to Palmer Land. The island partly surrounds Wilkins Sound, which lies to its west.[1] Alexander Island is about 390 kilometres (240 mi) long in a north–south direction, 80 kilometres (50 mi) wide in the north, and 240 kilometres (150 mi) wide in the south.[2] Alexander Island is the second-largest uninhabited island in the world, after Devon Island.

Alexander Island
Alexander Island shown within Antarctica
Alexander Island
Geography
LocationAntarctica
Coordinates71°00′S 70°00′W / 71.000°S 70.000°W / -71.000; -70.000
Area49,070 km2 (18,950 sq mi)
Area rank28th
Length390 km (242 mi)
Width80 km (50 mi)
Highest elevation2,987 m (9800 ft)
Highest pointMount Stephenson
Administration
Administered under the Antarctic Treaty System
Demographics
Population0

History edit

Alexander Island was discovered on January 28, 1821, by a Russian expedition under Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, who named it Alexander I Land for the reigning Tsar Alexander I of Russia.

What, in fact, is an island, was believed to be part of the Antarctic mainland until 1940. Its insular nature was proven in December 1940, by a two-person sledge party composed of Finn Ronne and Carl Eklund of the United States Antarctic Service.[2][3] In the 1950s, a British base administered as part of the British Antarctic Territory was constructed as Fossil Bluff (Base KG).[4]

The island was claimed by the United Kingdom in 1908 as part of the British Antarctic Territory. Territorial claims have also been set by both Chile (in 1940) and Argentina (in 1942).[5] Currently, under the Antarctic Treaty no claim has been officially recognized. The island contains the British Fossil Bluff meteorological centre and refuelling base.[6]

Geography edit

 
Satellite photo of Alexander Island (NASA imagery)
 
Alexander Island Mountain Ranges

The surface of Alexander Island is predominantly ice-covered. There exist some exposed nunataks and a few ice-free areas of significant size, including Ablation Point Massif. The nunataks are the peaks of north–south trending mountain ranges and hills. They include the Colbert, Havre, Lassus, Rouen, Sofia University, and Walton Mountains, the Staccato Peaks, the Lully Foothills, the Finlandia Foothills, the Elgar Uplands, and the Douglas Range. These mountains, peaks, hills, and uplands are surrounded by a permanent ice sheet, which consists of glaciers that flow off of Alexander Island. These glaciers flow west into the Bach and Wilkins Ice Shelves and Bellingshausen Sea, and east into the George VI Ice Shelf. The George VI Ice Shelf is fed by both by outlet glaciers from the ice cap on Palmer Land and Alexander Island.[1][2][7]

Another notable feature of Alexander Island is Hodgson Lake. Hodgson Lake is a former subglacial lake that has emerged from under an ice sheet that had covered it. Hodgson Lake is 2 km (1.2 mi) long by 1.5 km (0.93 mi), and has a 93.4 m (306 ft) deep water column that lies sealed beneath a 3.6 to 4.0 m (11.8 to 13.1 ft) thick perennial lake ice.

The northern side of Hodgson Lake is bounded by the Saturn Glacier, which flows east into George VI Sound, while the southern side of Hodgson Lake is bounded by the northern face of Citadel Bastion. During the Last Glacial Maximum, Hodgson Lake was covered by the ice sheet at least 470 m (1,540 ft) thick.

This ice sheet started thinning about 13,500 years ago. It retreated and left Hodgson Lake covered by perennial ice sometime before 11,000 years ago. This lake has been covered by perennial ice since that time.[8][9]

Other features on the island include Damocles Point[10] and Mount Tyrrell.

Brahms Inlet edit

Brahms Inlet (71°28′S 73°41′W / 71.467°S 73.683°W / -71.467; -73.683) is an ice-filled inlet, 25 nautical miles (46 km) long and 6 nautical miles (11 km) wide, indenting the north side of Beethoven Peninsula on Alexander Island between Harris Peninsula and Derocher Peninsula, while the headland Mazza Point lies immediately northeast of the inlet and Mount Grieg lies immediately southeast of the base of Brahms Inlet. It was observed from the air and first mapped by the Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition (RARE), 1947–48, and re-mapped from the RARE air photos by Derek J.H. Searle of the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey in 1960. It was named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee after Johannes Brahms, the German composer.[11]

Harris Peninsula edit

Harris Peninsula (71°31′S 74°6′W / 71.517°S 74.100°W / -71.517; -74.100) is a broad snow-covered peninsula surmounted by Mount Lee, between Verdi Inlet and Brahms Inlet on the north side of the Beethoven Peninsula, located in the southwest portion of Alexander Island, Antarctica. It is one of eight peninsulas of Alexander Island. It was photographed from the air by the RARE, 1947–48, and mapped from these photographs by D. Searle of the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey, 1960. It was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Commander Michael J. Harris, U.S. Navy, Commanding Officer of Squadron VXE-6, from May 1982 to May 1983.[12]

Lyadov Glacier edit

Lyadov Glacier (71°32′00″S 73°45′00″W / 71.53333°S 73.75000°W / -71.53333; -73.75000) is a glacier flowing east-northeast from Harris Peninsula, Alexander Island, into Brahms Inlet. It was named by the USSR Academy of Sciences in 1987 after Anatoly Lyadov (1855–1914), a Russian composer.

Geology edit

 
Antarctic Peninsula's tectonic movement
 
Fossil Bluff base on Alexander Island

According to Hole, "The geology of Alexander Island can be attributed mainly to processes associated with the subduction of proto-Pacific oceanic crust along the western margin of the Antarctic Peninsula, from latest Triassic to Late Tertiary times." The LeMay Group accretionary prism complex, along with plutonic and volcanic rocks, are prevalent along the western portion of the island. The LeMay Group consists of variably-deformed and metamorphosed sedimentary and igneous rocks. Although it is dominated by deformed arkosic sedimentary rocks, it includes turbiditic greywackes, black mudstones, and conglomerates. The 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) thick Upper Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous Fossil Bluff Group sedimentary rocks outcrop as a 250 kilometers (160 miles) long by 30 kilometers (19 miles) wide belt along the eastern coast. This Fossil Bluff Group consists of a basal deep-marine assemblage 2,200 meters (7,200 feet) thick, overlain by a mudstone assemblage up to 950 meters (3,120 feet) thick, followed by a shallow-marine assemblage of coarsening upward sandstones. Alkali basalts erupted after the cessation of subduction. These range in age from the tephrites at Mount Pinafore (5.5–7.6 Ma), to the basanites at Rothschild Island (5.5 Ma) and Hornpipe Heights (2.5 Ma), to the alkali and olivine basalts on Beethoven Peninsula (<1-2.5 Ma).[13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20]

The LeMay Range Fault trends N-S, parallel to the George VI Sound, and the Fossil Bluff Formation is downfaulted to the east of this fault against the LeMay Group. Sand dykes are found against this fault zone and in many other parts of the Fossil Bay Formation. Fossils within the Fossil Bluff Formation include ammonites, belemnites, bivalves, and serpulids.[16]

See also edit

  Islands portal   Geography portal

References edit

  1. ^ a b Stewart, J. (2011) Antarctic An Encyclopedia McFarland & Company Inc, New York. 1776 pp. ISBN 9780786435906.
  2. ^ a b c
  3. ^ Siple, Paul (1963). "Obituary: Carl R. Eklund, 1909–1962" (PDF). Arctic. Arctic Institute of North America. 16 (2): 147–148. doi:10.14430/arctic3531. Retrieved 19 January 2013.
  4. ^ . British Antarctic Survey Archives Service (2010)
  5. ^ "Alexander Island". Encyclopædia Britannica. 20 July 1998. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  6. ^ Mills, William (2003). Exploring Polar Frontiers: A Historical Encyclopedia (1 ed.). p. 9. ISBN 1-57607-422-6. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  7. ^ Smith, James A.; Bentley, Michael J.; Hodgson, Dominic A.; Cook, Alison J. (2007). "George VI Ice Shelf: Past history, present behaviour and potential mechanisms for future collapse". Antarctic Science. 19 (1): 131–142. Bibcode:2007AntSc..19..131S. doi:10.1017/S0954102007000193. S2CID 128840101.
  8. ^ Hodgson, Dominic A.; Roberts, Stephen J.; Bentley, Michael J.; Smith, James A.; Johnson, Joanne S.; Verleyen, Elie; Vyverman, Wim; Hodson, Andy J.; Leng, Melanie J.; Cziferszky, Andreas; Fox, Adrian J.; Sanderson, David C.W. (2009). "Exploring former subglacial Hodgson Lake, Antarctica Paper I: Site description, geomorphology and limnology". Quaternary Science Reviews. 28 (23–24): 2295–2309. Bibcode:2009QSRv...28.2295H. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2009.04.011.
  9. ^ Hodgson, Dominic A.; Roberts, Stephen J.; Bentley, Michael J.; Carmichael, Emma L.; Smith, James A.; Verleyen, Elie; Vyverman, Wim; Geissler, Paul; Leng, Melanie J.; Sanderson, David C.W. (2009). "Exploring former subglacial Hodgson Lake, Antarctica. Paper II: Palaeolimnology". Quaternary Science Reviews. 28 (23–24): 2310–2325. Bibcode:2009QSRv...28.2310H. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2009.04.014.
  10. ^   This article incorporates public domain material from . Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
  11. ^ . Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
  12. ^ . Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  13. ^ Hole, M.J.; Smellie, J.L.; Marriner, G.F. (1991). Thomson, M.R.A.; Crame, J.A.; Thomson, J.W. (eds.). Geochemistry and tectonic setting of Cenozoic alkalne basalts from Alexander Island, Antarctic Peninsula, in Geological Evolution of Antarctica. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 521–522. ISBN 9780521372664.
  14. ^ Butterworth, P.J.; Macdonald, D.I.M. (1991). Thomson, M.R.A.; Crame, J.A.; Thomson, J.W. (eds.). Basin shallowing from the Mesozoic Fossil Bluff Group of Alexander Island and its regional tectonic significance, in Geological Evolution of Antarctica. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 449–453. ISBN 9780521372664.
  15. ^ Tranter, T.H. (1991). Thomson, M.R.A.; Crame, J.A.; Thomson, J.W. (eds.). Accretion and subduction processes along the Pacific margin of Gondwana, central Alexander Island, in Geological Evolution of Antarctica. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 437–441. ISBN 9780521372664.
  16. ^ a b Nell, P.A.R.; Storey, B.B. (1991). Thomson, M.R.A.; Crame, J.A.; Thomson, J.W. (eds.). Strike-slip tectonics within the Antarctic Peninsula fore-arc, in Geological Evolution of Antarctica. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 443–448. ISBN 9780521372664.
  17. ^ Macdonald, D.I.M. and P.J. Butterworth (1990) "The stratigraphy, setting and hydrocarbon potential of the Mesozoic sedimentary basins of the Antarctic Peninsula." in B. John, ed., pp. 101–125. Antarctica as an exploration frontier; hydrocarbon potential, geology, and hazards. AAPG Studies in Geology. vol. 31 American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, Oklahoma. doi:10.1306/St31524C8
  18. ^ MacDonald; Leat; Doubleday; Kelly (1999). "On the origin of fore-arc basins: New evidence of formation by rifting from the Jurassic of Alexander Island, Antarctica". Terra Nova. 11 (4): 186–193. Bibcode:1999TeNov..11..186M. doi:10.1046/j.1365-3121.1999.00244.x. S2CID 128675340.
  19. ^ Vaughan, Alan P. M.; Storey, Bryan C. (2000). "The eastern Palmer Land shear zone: A new terrane accretion model for the Mesozoic development of the Antarctic Peninsula". Journal of the Geological Society. 157 (6): 1243–1256. Bibcode:2000JGSoc.157.1243V. doi:10.1144/jgs.157.6.1243. S2CID 128496050.
  20. ^ McCarron, J. J.; Smellie, J. L. (1998). "Tectonic implications of fore-arc magmatism and generation of high-magnesian andesites: Alexander Island, Antarctica". Journal of the Geological Society. 155 (2): 269–280. Bibcode:1998JGSoc.155..269M. doi:10.1144/gsjgs.155.2.0269. S2CID 129620018.

71°00′S 70°00′W / 71.000°S 70.000°W / -71.000; -70.000

alexander, island, other, uses, disambiguation, which, also, known, alexander, island, alexander, land, alexander, land, alexander, archipelago, zemlja, alexandra, largest, island, antarctica, lies, bellingshausen, west, palmer, land, antarctic, peninsula, fro. For other uses see Alexander Island disambiguation Alexander Island which is also known as Alexander I Island Alexander I Land Alexander Land Alexander I Archipelago and Zemlja Alexandra I is the largest island of Antarctica It lies in the Bellingshausen Sea west of Palmer Land Antarctic Peninsula from which it is separated by Marguerite Bay and George VI Sound The George VI Ice Shelf entirely fills George VI Sound and connects Alexander Island to Palmer Land The island partly surrounds Wilkins Sound which lies to its west 1 Alexander Island is about 390 kilometres 240 mi long in a north south direction 80 kilometres 50 mi wide in the north and 240 kilometres 150 mi wide in the south 2 Alexander Island is the second largest uninhabited island in the world after Devon Island Alexander IslandAlexander Island shown within AntarcticaAlexander IslandGeographyLocationAntarcticaCoordinates71 00 S 70 00 W 71 000 S 70 000 W 71 000 70 000Area49 070 km2 18 950 sq mi Area rank28thLength390 km 242 mi Width80 km 50 mi Highest elevation2 987 m 9800 ft Highest pointMount StephensonAdministrationAdministered under the Antarctic Treaty SystemDemographicsPopulation0 Contents 1 History 2 Geography 2 1 Brahms Inlet 2 2 Harris Peninsula 2 3 Lyadov Glacier 3 Geology 4 See also 5 ReferencesHistory editAlexander Island was discovered on January 28 1821 by a Russian expedition under Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen who named it Alexander I Land for the reigning Tsar Alexander I of Russia What in fact is an island was believed to be part of the Antarctic mainland until 1940 Its insular nature was proven in December 1940 by a two person sledge party composed of Finn Ronne and Carl Eklund of the United States Antarctic Service 2 3 In the 1950s a British base administered as part of the British Antarctic Territory was constructed as Fossil Bluff Base KG 4 The island was claimed by the United Kingdom in 1908 as part of the British Antarctic Territory Territorial claims have also been set by both Chile in 1940 and Argentina in 1942 5 Currently under the Antarctic Treaty no claim has been officially recognized The island contains the British Fossil Bluff meteorological centre and refuelling base 6 Geography edit nbsp Satellite photo of Alexander Island NASA imagery nbsp Alexander Island Mountain RangesThe surface of Alexander Island is predominantly ice covered There exist some exposed nunataks and a few ice free areas of significant size including Ablation Point Massif The nunataks are the peaks of north south trending mountain ranges and hills They include the Colbert Havre Lassus Rouen Sofia University and Walton Mountains the Staccato Peaks the Lully Foothills the Finlandia Foothills the Elgar Uplands and the Douglas Range These mountains peaks hills and uplands are surrounded by a permanent ice sheet which consists of glaciers that flow off of Alexander Island These glaciers flow west into the Bach and Wilkins Ice Shelves and Bellingshausen Sea and east into the George VI Ice Shelf The George VI Ice Shelf is fed by both by outlet glaciers from the ice cap on Palmer Land and Alexander Island 1 2 7 Another notable feature of Alexander Island is Hodgson Lake Hodgson Lake is a former subglacial lake that has emerged from under an ice sheet that had covered it Hodgson Lake is 2 km 1 2 mi long by 1 5 km 0 93 mi and has a 93 4 m 306 ft deep water column that lies sealed beneath a 3 6 to 4 0 m 11 8 to 13 1 ft thick perennial lake ice The northern side of Hodgson Lake is bounded by the Saturn Glacier which flows east into George VI Sound while the southern side of Hodgson Lake is bounded by the northern face of Citadel Bastion During the Last Glacial Maximum Hodgson Lake was covered by the ice sheet at least 470 m 1 540 ft thick This ice sheet started thinning about 13 500 years ago It retreated and left Hodgson Lake covered by perennial ice sometime before 11 000 years ago This lake has been covered by perennial ice since that time 8 9 Other features on the island include Damocles Point 10 and Mount Tyrrell Brahms Inlet edit Brahms Inlet 71 28 S 73 41 W 71 467 S 73 683 W 71 467 73 683 is an ice filled inlet 25 nautical miles 46 km long and 6 nautical miles 11 km wide indenting the north side of Beethoven Peninsula on Alexander Island between Harris Peninsula and Derocher Peninsula while the headland Mazza Point lies immediately northeast of the inlet and Mount Grieg lies immediately southeast of the base of Brahms Inlet It was observed from the air and first mapped by the Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition RARE 1947 48 and re mapped from the RARE air photos by Derek J H Searle of the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey in 1960 It was named by the UK Antarctic Place Names Committee after Johannes Brahms the German composer 11 Harris Peninsula edit Harris Peninsula 71 31 S 74 6 W 71 517 S 74 100 W 71 517 74 100 is a broad snow covered peninsula surmounted by Mount Lee between Verdi Inlet and Brahms Inlet on the north side of the Beethoven Peninsula located in the southwest portion of Alexander Island Antarctica It is one of eight peninsulas of Alexander Island It was photographed from the air by the RARE 1947 48 and mapped from these photographs by D Searle of the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey 1960 It was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Commander Michael J Harris U S Navy Commanding Officer of Squadron VXE 6 from May 1982 to May 1983 12 Lyadov Glacier edit Lyadov Glacier 71 32 00 S 73 45 00 W 71 53333 S 73 75000 W 71 53333 73 75000 is a glacier flowing east northeast from Harris Peninsula Alexander Island into Brahms Inlet It was named by the USSR Academy of Sciences in 1987 after Anatoly Lyadov 1855 1914 a Russian composer Geology edit nbsp Antarctic Peninsula s tectonic movement nbsp Fossil Bluff base on Alexander IslandAccording to Hole The geology of Alexander Island can be attributed mainly to processes associated with the subduction of proto Pacific oceanic crust along the western margin of the Antarctic Peninsula from latest Triassic to Late Tertiary times The LeMay Group accretionary prism complex along with plutonic and volcanic rocks are prevalent along the western portion of the island The LeMay Group consists of variably deformed and metamorphosed sedimentary and igneous rocks Although it is dominated by deformed arkosic sedimentary rocks it includes turbiditic greywackes black mudstones and conglomerates The 4 kilometers 2 5 miles thick Upper Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous Fossil Bluff Group sedimentary rocks outcrop as a 250 kilometers 160 miles long by 30 kilometers 19 miles wide belt along the eastern coast This Fossil Bluff Group consists of a basal deep marine assemblage 2 200 meters 7 200 feet thick overlain by a mudstone assemblage up to 950 meters 3 120 feet thick followed by a shallow marine assemblage of coarsening upward sandstones Alkali basalts erupted after the cessation of subduction These range in age from the tephrites at Mount Pinafore 5 5 7 6 Ma to the basanites at Rothschild Island 5 5 Ma and Hornpipe Heights 2 5 Ma to the alkali and olivine basalts on Beethoven Peninsula lt 1 2 5 Ma 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 The LeMay Range Fault trends N S parallel to the George VI Sound and the Fossil Bluff Formation is downfaulted to the east of this fault against the LeMay Group Sand dykes are found against this fault zone and in many other parts of the Fossil Bay Formation Fossils within the Fossil Bluff Formation include ammonites belemnites bivalves and serpulids 16 See also editAdelaide Island Argentine Antarctica British Antarctic Territory Chilean Antarctic Territory Composite Antarctic Gazetteer Geology of the Antarctic Peninsula List of Antarctic islands south of 60 S List of Bulgarian toponyms in Antarctica Peel Cirque Scarab Bluff SCAR Territorial claims in Antarctica Witt Bluff nbsp Islands portal nbsp Geography portalReferences edit a b Stewart J 2011 Antarctic An Encyclopedia McFarland amp Company Inc New York 1776 pp ISBN 9780786435906 a b c U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Alexander Island Siple Paul 1963 Obituary Carl R Eklund 1909 1962 PDF Arctic Arctic Institute of North America 16 2 147 148 doi 10 14430 arctic3531 Retrieved 19 January 2013 HANDLIST OF METEOROLOGY RECORDS FROM BRITISH ANTARCTIC RESEARCH STATIONS British Antarctic Survey Archives Service 2010 Alexander Island Encyclopaedia Britannica 20 July 1998 Retrieved 20 January 2015 Mills William 2003 Exploring Polar Frontiers A Historical Encyclopedia 1 ed p 9 ISBN 1 57607 422 6 Retrieved 20 January 2015 Smith James A Bentley Michael J Hodgson Dominic A Cook Alison J 2007 George VI Ice Shelf Past history present behaviour and potential mechanisms for future collapse Antarctic Science 19 1 131 142 Bibcode 2007AntSc 19 131S doi 10 1017 S0954102007000193 S2CID 128840101 Hodgson Dominic A Roberts Stephen J Bentley Michael J Smith James A Johnson Joanne S Verleyen Elie Vyverman Wim Hodson Andy J Leng Melanie J Cziferszky Andreas Fox Adrian J Sanderson David C W 2009 Exploring former subglacial Hodgson Lake Antarctica Paper I Site description geomorphology and limnology Quaternary Science Reviews 28 23 24 2295 2309 Bibcode 2009QSRv 28 2295H doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2009 04 011 Hodgson Dominic A Roberts Stephen J Bentley Michael J Carmichael Emma L Smith James A Verleyen Elie Vyverman Wim Geissler Paul Leng Melanie J Sanderson David C W 2009 Exploring former subglacial Hodgson Lake Antarctica Paper II Palaeolimnology Quaternary Science Reviews 28 23 24 2310 2325 Bibcode 2009QSRv 28 2310H doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2009 04 014 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Alexander Island Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey Brahms Inlet Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved 15 August 2011 Harris Peninsula Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved 24 May 2012 Hole M J Smellie J L Marriner G F 1991 Thomson M R A Crame J A Thomson J W eds Geochemistry and tectonic setting of Cenozoic alkalne basalts from Alexander Island Antarctic Peninsula in Geological Evolution of Antarctica Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 521 522 ISBN 9780521372664 Butterworth P J Macdonald D I M 1991 Thomson M R A Crame J A Thomson J W eds Basin shallowing from the Mesozoic Fossil Bluff Group of Alexander Island and its regional tectonic significance in Geological Evolution of Antarctica Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 449 453 ISBN 9780521372664 Tranter T H 1991 Thomson M R A Crame J A Thomson J W eds Accretion and subduction processes along the Pacific margin of Gondwana central Alexander Island in Geological Evolution of Antarctica Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 437 441 ISBN 9780521372664 a b Nell P A R Storey B B 1991 Thomson M R A Crame J A Thomson J W eds Strike slip tectonics within the Antarctic Peninsula fore arc in Geological Evolution of Antarctica Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 443 448 ISBN 9780521372664 Macdonald D I M and P J Butterworth 1990 The stratigraphy setting and hydrocarbon potential of the Mesozoic sedimentary basins of the Antarctic Peninsula in B John ed pp 101 125 Antarctica as an exploration frontier hydrocarbon potential geology and hazards AAPG Studies in Geology vol 31 American Association of Petroleum Geologists Tulsa Oklahoma doi 10 1306 St31524C8 MacDonald Leat Doubleday Kelly 1999 On the origin of fore arc basins New evidence of formation by rifting from the Jurassic of Alexander Island Antarctica Terra Nova 11 4 186 193 Bibcode 1999TeNov 11 186M doi 10 1046 j 1365 3121 1999 00244 x S2CID 128675340 Vaughan Alan P M Storey Bryan C 2000 The eastern Palmer Land shear zone A new terrane accretion model for the Mesozoic development of the Antarctic Peninsula Journal of the Geological Society 157 6 1243 1256 Bibcode 2000JGSoc 157 1243V doi 10 1144 jgs 157 6 1243 S2CID 128496050 McCarron J J Smellie J L 1998 Tectonic implications of fore arc magmatism and generation of high magnesian andesites Alexander Island Antarctica Journal of the Geological Society 155 2 269 280 Bibcode 1998JGSoc 155 269M doi 10 1144 gsjgs 155 2 0269 S2CID 129620018 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alexander Island nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Brahms Inlet Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Harris Peninsula Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Liadov Glacier Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey 71 00 S 70 00 W 71 000 S 70 000 W 71 000 70 000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander Island amp oldid 1163013172, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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