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Arctowski Peninsula

The Arctowski Peninsula (64°45′S 62°25′W / 64.750°S 62.417°W / -64.750; -62.417 (Arctowski Peninsula)) is a peninsula, 15 nautical miles (28 km; 17 mi) long in a north-south direction, lying between Andvord Bay and Wilhelmina Bay on the west coast of Graham Land, Antarctica.[1]

Gentoo penguins dot a plateau on Cuverville Island overlooking Arctowski Peninsula
Geography
LocationGerlache Strait
Coordinates64°45′S 62°25′W / 64.750°S 62.417°W / -64.750; -62.417 (Arctowski Peninsula)

Location edit

 
Danco Coast, Antarctic Peninsula. Arctowski Peninsula in center

The Arctowski Peninsula is on the Danco Coast on the west of the Antarctic Peninsula. It extends in a north-northwest direction from the Forbidden Plateau to the south into the Gerlache Strait to the north. Wilhelmina Bay is to the east.[2] Across the Gerlache Strait the end of the peninsula faces the Solvay Mountains on Brabant Island to the north, and the Osterrieth Range on Anvers Island to the northwest. Rongé Island is west of the northwest side of the peninsula. The Laussedat Heights on the southwest side of the peninsula look over Andvord Bay to the west.[2] The peninsula extends southeast to a line defined by Arago Glacier, which flows south into Henryk Cove, and Woodbury Glacier, which flows north into Piccard Cove.[3]

Northern features include Cape Anna, Mount Fourcade, Orne Harbour, Spigot Peak, Selvick Cove, Zeiss Needle, Sable Pinnacles (Noire Rock) and Henryk Peak. Central features include Wild Spur, Henryk Glacier, Pulfrich Peak, Hubl Peak and Stolze Peak. Southern features include Porro Bluff, Orel Ice Fring, Laussedat Heights, Deville Glacier, Scheimpflug Nunatak, Fliess Glacier (flowing into Neko Harbour) and The Downfall.[3]

Geology edit

On the west coast of the Arctowski Peninsula, and the islands lying to the west, there are three main groups of exposed rocks. Permian(?) – Triassic metasediments of the Trinity Peninsula Group, Early Cretaceous lavas, agglomerates and tuffs of the Antarctic Peninsula Volcanic Group, and Mid-Cretaceous adamellite, granite, granodiorite, diorite, tonalite and gabbro plutons of the Andean Intrusive Suite. There are also basic and acid hypabyssal dykes that may date to the Late Cretaceous.[4]

Discovery and name edit

The Arctowski Peninsula was discovered by the Belgian Antarctic Expedition (BelgAE), 1897–99, under Adrien de Gerlache. The name, for Henryk Arctowski of that expedition, was suggested by the United States Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for this previously unnamed feature.[1]

Northern features edit

Northern features include, from north to south:

Anna Cove edit

64°35′S 62°26′W / 64.583°S 62.433°W / -64.583; -62.433. A cove immediately east of {[Cape Anna]] at the north end of Arctowski Peninsula. Charted by the BelgAE on January 30, 1898, and named in association with Cape Anna.[5]

Mount Fourcade edit

64°36′S 62°30′W / 64.600°S 62.500°W / -64.600; -62.500. Mountain standing 2 nautical miles (3.7 km; 2.3 mi) southwest of Cape Anna. Charted by the BelgAE under Gerlache, 1897-99. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for H.G. Fourcade, South African surveyor who designed the stereogoniometer and gave it practical application for plotting photogrammetric surveys in about 1900.[6]

Orne Harbor edit

64°37′S 62°32′W / 64.617°S 62.533°W / -64.617; -62.533. Cove 1 nautical mile (1.9 km; 1.2 mi) wide, indenting the west coast of Graham Land 2 nautical miles (3.7 km; 2.3 mi) southwest of Cape Anna. Discovered by the BelgAE under Gerlache in 1898. The name Orne Harbor was probably in use by Norwegian whalers, because it was used by Scottish geologist David Ferguson following his geologic reconnaissance of this area aboard the whaler Hanka in 1913.[7]

Spigot Peak edit

 
Spigot Peak

64°38′S 62°34′W / 64.633°S 62.567°W / -64.633; -62.567. A conspicuous black peak 285 metres (935 ft) high, marking the south side of the entrance to Orne Harbor. Shown on an Argentine government chart of 1950. The name, given by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) in 1956, is descriptive of the appearance of the feature; a spigot is a wooden peg.[8]

Lagarrigue Cove edit

64°39′S 62°34′W / 64.650°S 62.567°W / -64.650; -62.567. A small cove south of Spigot Peak, Errera Channel, on the Danco Cast. The name was proposed by the Argentine navy and was approved by the Argentine geographical coordinating commission in 1956 to replace the provisional name "Puerto Lote.| Named in memory of a navy cook with the Argentine Antarctic Expedition of 1947-48 who perished in a crevasse accident in the vicinity.[9] Called "Selvick Cove" by the United Kingdom.[10]

Sophie Rocks edit

 
Sophie Rocks on the Danco Coast of Graham Land on the Antarctic Peninsula, from Cook's Through the First Antarctic Night, 1898–1899[11]

64°39′00″S 62°33′00″W / 64.65000°S 62.55000°W / -64.65000; -62.55000. A small group of land rocks, midway between Spigot Peak and Zeiss Needle [Mount Dedo], overlooking Selvick Cove to the W, and Orne Harbour to the E, Arctowski Peninsula. First seen and named by the Belgian Antarctic Expedition 1898, the name Roches Sophie was shown on Lecointe map 1899. However Frederick Albert Cook M.D. a member of the same expedition used the name Sophie Rocks, and it was decided to name this feature Sophie Rocks to retain the use of the name in this area.[12]

Mount Dedo edit

64°39′S 62°33′W / 64.650°S 62.550°W / -64.650; -62.550. Conspicuous needle-like peak, 695 metres (2,280 ft) high, standing south of Orne Harbor on the west coast of Graham Land. Charted by the BelgAE under Gerlache, 1897–99. The name appears on an Argentine government chart of 1954 and is descriptive, "dedo" meaning finger in Spanish.[13] Called "Zeiss Needle" by the United Kingdom.[14]

Vidbol Glacier edit

64°40′00″S 62°29′40″W / 64.66667°S 62.49444°W / -64.66667; -62.49444. A 5.5 kilometres (3.4 mi) long and 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) wide glacier on Arctowski Peninsula draining the north slopes of Pulfrich Peak. Flowing northwestwards west of Henryk Peak and east of Mount Dedo to enter Gerlache Strait at Orne Harbour. Named after the Vidbol River in Northwestern Bulgaria.[15]

Noire Rock edit

64°40′S 62°35′W / 64.667°S 62.583°W / -64.667; -62.583. A dark pinnacle rock 1.5 nautical miles (2.8 km; 1.7 mi) southwest of Mount Dedo. Charted and descriptively named (noire means black) by the BelgAE under Gerlache in 1898.[16]

Henryk Peak edit

64°40′00″S 62°27′30″W / 64.66667°S 62.45833°W / -64.66667; -62.45833. A prominent peak in the northern part of the main ridge of Arctowski Peninsula. Named after Henryk Arctowski, member of the 1897-1899 Belgian Antarctic Expedition.[17]

Central features edit

Central features include, from north to south:

Pulfrich Peak edit

64°41′S 62°28′W / 64.683°S 62.467°W / -64.683; -62.467. A peak near the east part of Wild Spur on Arctowski Peninsula, on the west coast of Graham Land. Mapped by the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS) from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd. in 1956-57. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Carl Pulfrich (1858-1927), "father of stereophotogrammetry,|who independently developed a stereocomparator in 1901 and developed the principle of the "floating mark|established by Franz Stolze.[18]

Wild Spur edit

64°42′S 62°32′W / 64.700°S 62.533°W / -64.700; -62.533. Spur extending from Pulfrich Peak to the west side of Arctowski Peninsula. Shown on an Argentine government chart of 1957. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Heinrich Wild (1833-1902), Swiss instrument designer responsible for the autograph, first used about 1924 for stereosurvey from ground stations and later adapted for air survey.[19]

Henryk Glacier edit

 
Henryk Glacier

64°42′00″S 62°30′00″W / 64.70000°S 62.50000°W / -64.70000; -62.50000. A glacier on the Arctowski Peninsula with a noteworthy cirque at the head. It flows southwest between Wild Spur and Hübl Peak into Errera Channel. Named in association with the peninsula after Henryk Arctowski by the Polish Antarctic Expedition, about 1993.[20]

Stolze Peak edit

64°43′S 62°26′W / 64.717°S 62.433°W / -64.717; -62.433. Peak on Arctowski Peninsula near the head of Beaupré Cove. Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd. in 1956-57. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Franz Stolze, a German scientist who in 1881 suggested improvements in methods of air photography and, in 1892, first established the principle of the "floating mark|used in stereophotogrammetry, later developed by Pulfrich.[21]

Hübl Peak edit

64°43′S 62°29′W / 64.717°S 62.483°W / -64.717; -62.483. A peak west of Stolze Peak on Arctowski Peninsula. Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd. in 1956-57. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Artur Freiherr von Hubl (1853-1932), Austrian surveyor, head of the topographic section of the Militargeographische Institut, Vienna, who in 1894 designed a stereocomparator which was developed independently by Doctor Carl Pulfrich in 1901.[22]

Southern features edit

Southern features include,

Wheatstone Glacier edit

 
Wheatstone Glacier

64°44′S 62°31′W / 64.733°S 62.517°W / -64.733; -62.517. A glacier on the west coast of Graham Land. It enters Errera Channel east of Danco Island. Charted by the BelgAE under Gerlache, 1897-99. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Sir Charles Wheatstone (1802-75), English scientist and inventor who designed the first mirror stereoscope in 1832.[23]

Birdsend Bluff edit

64°45′S 62°33′W / 64.750°S 62.550°W / -64.750; -62.550. Rocky bluff at the south side of the mouth of Wheatstone Glacier. First roughly surveyed by the BelgAE under Gerlache, {{convert|1897-99. The name originated when two members of the FIDS were camped immediately below this bluff in May 1956 and a fall of rock from the bluff flattened a bird outside their tent.[24]

Porro Bluff edit

64°45′S 62°33′W / 64.750°S 62.550°W / -64.750; -62.550. Bluff lying south of Birdsend Bluff and overlooking Errera Channel. Shown on an Argentine government chart of 1950. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Ignazio Porro (1795-1875), Italian engineer who in 1851 invented a prism combination, important in the development of stereo-plotting instruments.[25]

Orel Ice Fringe edit

64°46′S 62°36′W / 64.767°S 62.600°W / -64.767; -62.600. A strip of coastal ice bordering the south side of Errera Channel between Beneden Head and Porro Bluff. Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd. in 1956-57. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Eduard von Orel (1877-1941), Austrian surveyor who in 1905 designed the first stereoautograph for plotting maps directly from horizontal photographs.[26]

Deville Glacier edit

64°48′S 62°35′W / 64.800°S 62.583°W / -64.800; -62.583. Glacier flowing along the south side of Laussedat Heights into Andvord Bay. The glacier is shown on an Argentine government chart of 1952. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Edouard G. Deville (1849-1924), Surveyor General of Canada, 1885-1924, who introduced and developed photogrammetric methods of survey in Canada from {{convert|1888 onward.[27]

Scheimpflug Nunatak edit

64°48′S 62°36′W / 64.800°S 62.600°W / -64.800; -62.600. Nunatak in the mouth of Deville Glacier on Arctowski Peninsula. Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd. in 1956-57. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Theodor Scheimpflug (1865-1911), Austrian pioneer of aerophotogrammetry.[28]

Laussedat Heights edit

64°47′S 62°30′W / 64.783°S 62.500°W / -64.783; -62.500. A series of elevations extending eastward for 8 nautical miles (15 km; 9.2 mi) in the southwest part of Arctowski Peninsula. Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd. in 1956-57. Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Aimé Laussedat (1819-1907), French military engineer, the "father of photogrammetry," who pioneered the application of photography to survey from about {{convert|1851 onward.[29]

Nadjakov Glacier edit

64°45′10″S 62°23′20″W / 64.75278°S 62.38889°W / -64.75278; -62.38889. A 5.5 kilometres (3.4 mi) long and 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) wide glacier on Arctowski Peninsula draining north-northeastwards to enter the head of Beaupré Cove east of Stolze Peak. Named after the Bulgarian physicist Georgi Nadjakov (1897-1981) who discovered the photoelectret state essential to modern photocopying.[30]

The Downfall edit

64°48′S 62°23′W / 64.800°S 62.383°W / -64.800; -62.383. A mountain (c. 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) high between the heads of Arago Glacier and Woodbury Glacier. Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd. in 1956-57. So named by the UK-APC in 1960 because the feature marked the end of the route from Orel Ice Fringe by which members of the FIDS at Danco Island station had hoped in 1956 to reach Forbidden Plateau. A very steep drop on the east side of the summit precludes further progress.[31]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Alberts 1995, p. 25.
  2. ^ a b Graham Land and South Shetland BAS.
  3. ^ a b Birkenmajer 1995, p. 48b.
  4. ^ Birkenmajer 1995, p. 47.
  5. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 21, Anna Cove.
  6. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 254.
  7. ^ Alberts 1995, pp. 546–547.
  8. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 701.
  9. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 411.
  10. ^ Selvick Cove SCAR.
  11. ^ Cook 1900, p. 160b.
  12. ^ Sophie Rocks SCAR.
  13. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 179.
  14. ^ Zeiss Needle SCAR.
  15. ^ Vidbol Glacier SCAR.
  16. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 529.
  17. ^ Henryk Peak SCAR.
  18. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 595.
  19. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 813.
  20. ^ Henryk Glacier SCAR.
  21. ^ Alberts 1995, pp. 714–715.
  22. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 350.
  23. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 807.
  24. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 68.
  25. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 584.
  26. ^ Alberts 1995, pp. 545–546.
  27. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 186.
  28. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 652.
  29. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 422.
  30. ^ Nadjakov Glacier SCAR.
  31. ^ Alberts 1995, p. 198.

Sources edit

  • Alberts, Fred G., ed. (1995), Geographic Names of the Antarctic (PDF) (2 ed.), United States Board on Geographic Names, retrieved 2023-12-03   This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Board on Geographic Names.
  • Birkenmajer, Krzystof (1995), "Geology of Gerlache Strait, West Antarctica. I. Arctowski Peninsula" (PDF), Polish Polar Research, 16 (1–2): 47–60, retrieved 2024-05-28
  • Cook, Frederick A (1900), Through the First Antarctic Night, 1898–1899
  • Graham Land and South Shetland Islands, BAS: British Antarctic Survey, 2005, retrieved 2024-05-03
  • "Henryk Glacier", Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research
  • "Henryk Peak", Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research
  • "Nadjakov Glacier", Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research
  • "Selvick Cove", Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research
  • "Sophie Rocks", Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research
  • "Vidbol Glacier", Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research
  • "Zeiss Needle", Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research

arctowski, peninsula, peninsula, nautical, miles, long, north, south, direction, lying, between, andvord, wilhelmina, west, coast, graham, land, antarctica, gentoo, penguins, plateau, cuverville, island, overlooking, geographylocationgerlache, straitcoordinate. The Arctowski Peninsula 64 45 S 62 25 W 64 750 S 62 417 W 64 750 62 417 Arctowski Peninsula is a peninsula 15 nautical miles 28 km 17 mi long in a north south direction lying between Andvord Bay and Wilhelmina Bay on the west coast of Graham Land Antarctica 1 Gentoo penguins dot a plateau on Cuverville Island overlooking Arctowski PeninsulaGeographyLocationGerlache StraitCoordinates64 45 S 62 25 W 64 750 S 62 417 W 64 750 62 417 Arctowski Peninsula Contents 1 Location 2 Geology 3 Discovery and name 4 Northern features 4 1 Anna Cove 4 2 Mount Fourcade 4 3 Orne Harbor 4 4 Spigot Peak 4 5 Lagarrigue Cove 4 6 Sophie Rocks 4 7 Mount Dedo 4 8 Vidbol Glacier 4 9 Noire Rock 4 10 Henryk Peak 5 Central features 5 1 Pulfrich Peak 5 2 Wild Spur 5 3 Henryk Glacier 5 4 Stolze Peak 5 5 Hubl Peak 6 Southern features 6 1 Wheatstone Glacier 6 2 Birdsend Bluff 6 3 Porro Bluff 6 4 Orel Ice Fringe 6 5 Deville Glacier 6 6 Scheimpflug Nunatak 6 7 Laussedat Heights 6 8 Nadjakov Glacier 6 9 The Downfall 7 References 8 SourcesLocation edit nbsp Danco Coast Antarctic Peninsula Arctowski Peninsula in center The Arctowski Peninsula is on the Danco Coast on the west of the Antarctic Peninsula It extends in a north northwest direction from the Forbidden Plateau to the south into the Gerlache Strait to the north Wilhelmina Bay is to the east 2 Across the Gerlache Strait the end of the peninsula faces the Solvay Mountains on Brabant Island to the north and the Osterrieth Range on Anvers Island to the northwest Ronge Island is west of the northwest side of the peninsula The Laussedat Heights on the southwest side of the peninsula look over Andvord Bay to the west 2 The peninsula extends southeast to a line defined by Arago Glacier which flows south into Henryk Cove and Woodbury Glacier which flows north into Piccard Cove 3 Northern features include Cape Anna Mount Fourcade Orne Harbour Spigot Peak Selvick Cove Zeiss Needle Sable Pinnacles Noire Rock and Henryk Peak Central features include Wild Spur Henryk Glacier Pulfrich Peak Hubl Peak and Stolze Peak Southern features include Porro Bluff Orel Ice Fring Laussedat Heights Deville Glacier Scheimpflug Nunatak Fliess Glacier flowing into Neko Harbour and The Downfall 3 Geology editOn the west coast of the Arctowski Peninsula and the islands lying to the west there are three main groups of exposed rocks Permian Triassic metasediments of the Trinity Peninsula Group Early Cretaceous lavas agglomerates and tuffs of the Antarctic Peninsula Volcanic Group and Mid Cretaceous adamellite granite granodiorite diorite tonalite and gabbro plutons of the Andean Intrusive Suite There are also basic and acid hypabyssal dykes that may date to the Late Cretaceous 4 Discovery and name editThe Arctowski Peninsula was discovered by the Belgian Antarctic Expedition BelgAE 1897 99 under Adrien de Gerlache The name for Henryk Arctowski of that expedition was suggested by the United States Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names US ACAN for this previously unnamed feature 1 Northern features edit nbsp Copernix annotated satellite view Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Northern features include from north to south Anna Cove edit 64 35 S 62 26 W 64 583 S 62 433 W 64 583 62 433 A cove immediately east of Cape Anna at the north end of Arctowski Peninsula Charted by the BelgAE on January 30 1898 and named in association with Cape Anna 5 Mount Fourcade edit 64 36 S 62 30 W 64 600 S 62 500 W 64 600 62 500 Mountain standing 2 nautical miles 3 7 km 2 3 mi southwest of Cape Anna Charted by the BelgAE under Gerlache 1897 99 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for H G Fourcade South African surveyor who designed the stereogoniometer and gave it practical application for plotting photogrammetric surveys in about 1900 6 Orne Harbor edit Main article Orne Harbor 64 37 S 62 32 W 64 617 S 62 533 W 64 617 62 533 Cove 1 nautical mile 1 9 km 1 2 mi wide indenting the west coast of Graham Land 2 nautical miles 3 7 km 2 3 mi southwest of Cape Anna Discovered by the BelgAE under Gerlache in 1898 The name Orne Harbor was probably in use by Norwegian whalers because it was used by Scottish geologist David Ferguson following his geologic reconnaissance of this area aboard the whaler Hanka in 1913 7 Spigot Peak edit nbsp Spigot Peak 64 38 S 62 34 W 64 633 S 62 567 W 64 633 62 567 A conspicuous black peak 285 metres 935 ft high marking the south side of the entrance to Orne Harbor Shown on an Argentine government chart of 1950 The name given by the UK Antarctic Place Names Committee UK APC in 1956 is descriptive of the appearance of the feature a spigot is a wooden peg 8 Lagarrigue Cove edit 64 39 S 62 34 W 64 650 S 62 567 W 64 650 62 567 A small cove south of Spigot Peak Errera Channel on the Danco Cast The name was proposed by the Argentine navy and was approved by the Argentine geographical coordinating commission in 1956 to replace the provisional name Puerto Lote Named in memory of a navy cook with the Argentine Antarctic Expedition of 1947 48 who perished in a crevasse accident in the vicinity 9 Called Selvick Cove by the United Kingdom 10 Sophie Rocks edit nbsp Sophie Rocks on the Danco Coast of Graham Land on the Antarctic Peninsula from Cook s Through the First Antarctic Night 1898 1899 11 64 39 00 S 62 33 00 W 64 65000 S 62 55000 W 64 65000 62 55000 A small group of land rocks midway between Spigot Peak and Zeiss Needle Mount Dedo overlooking Selvick Cove to the W and Orne Harbour to the E Arctowski Peninsula First seen and named by the Belgian Antarctic Expedition 1898 the name Roches Sophie was shown on Lecointe map 1899 However Frederick Albert Cook M D a member of the same expedition used the name Sophie Rocks and it was decided to name this feature Sophie Rocks to retain the use of the name in this area 12 Mount Dedo edit 64 39 S 62 33 W 64 650 S 62 550 W 64 650 62 550 Conspicuous needle like peak 695 metres 2 280 ft high standing south of Orne Harbor on the west coast of Graham Land Charted by the BelgAE under Gerlache 1897 99 The name appears on an Argentine government chart of 1954 and is descriptive dedo meaning finger in Spanish 13 Called Zeiss Needle by the United Kingdom 14 Vidbol Glacier edit 64 40 00 S 62 29 40 W 64 66667 S 62 49444 W 64 66667 62 49444 A 5 5 kilometres 3 4 mi long and 1 5 kilometres 0 93 mi wide glacier on Arctowski Peninsula draining the north slopes of Pulfrich Peak Flowing northwestwards west of Henryk Peak and east of Mount Dedo to enter Gerlache Strait at Orne Harbour Named after the Vidbol River in Northwestern Bulgaria 15 Noire Rock edit 64 40 S 62 35 W 64 667 S 62 583 W 64 667 62 583 A dark pinnacle rock 1 5 nautical miles 2 8 km 1 7 mi southwest of Mount Dedo Charted and descriptively named noire means black by the BelgAE under Gerlache in 1898 16 Henryk Peak edit 64 40 00 S 62 27 30 W 64 66667 S 62 45833 W 64 66667 62 45833 A prominent peak in the northern part of the main ridge of Arctowski Peninsula Named after Henryk Arctowski member of the 1897 1899 Belgian Antarctic Expedition 17 Central features editCentral features include from north to south Pulfrich Peak edit 64 41 S 62 28 W 64 683 S 62 467 W 64 683 62 467 A peak near the east part of Wild Spur on Arctowski Peninsula on the west coast of Graham Land Mapped by the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd in 1956 57 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for Carl Pulfrich 1858 1927 father of stereophotogrammetry who independently developed a stereocomparator in 1901 and developed the principle of the floating mark established by Franz Stolze 18 Wild Spur edit 64 42 S 62 32 W 64 700 S 62 533 W 64 700 62 533 Spur extending from Pulfrich Peak to the west side of Arctowski Peninsula Shown on an Argentine government chart of 1957 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for Heinrich Wild 1833 1902 Swiss instrument designer responsible for the autograph first used about 1924 for stereosurvey from ground stations and later adapted for air survey 19 Henryk Glacier edit nbsp Henryk Glacier 64 42 00 S 62 30 00 W 64 70000 S 62 50000 W 64 70000 62 50000 A glacier on the Arctowski Peninsula with a noteworthy cirque at the head It flows southwest between Wild Spur and Hubl Peak into Errera Channel Named in association with the peninsula after Henryk Arctowski by the Polish Antarctic Expedition about 1993 20 Stolze Peak edit 64 43 S 62 26 W 64 717 S 62 433 W 64 717 62 433 Peak on Arctowski Peninsula near the head of Beaupre Cove Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd in 1956 57 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for Franz Stolze a German scientist who in 1881 suggested improvements in methods of air photography and in 1892 first established the principle of the floating mark used in stereophotogrammetry later developed by Pulfrich 21 Hubl Peak edit 64 43 S 62 29 W 64 717 S 62 483 W 64 717 62 483 A peak west of Stolze Peak on Arctowski Peninsula Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd in 1956 57 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for Artur Freiherr von Hubl 1853 1932 Austrian surveyor head of the topographic section of the Militargeographische Institut Vienna who in 1894 designed a stereocomparator which was developed independently by Doctor Carl Pulfrich in 1901 22 Southern features editSouthern features include Wheatstone Glacier edit nbsp Wheatstone Glacier 64 44 S 62 31 W 64 733 S 62 517 W 64 733 62 517 A glacier on the west coast of Graham Land It enters Errera Channel east of Danco Island Charted by the BelgAE under Gerlache 1897 99 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for Sir Charles Wheatstone 1802 75 English scientist and inventor who designed the first mirror stereoscope in 1832 23 Birdsend Bluff edit 64 45 S 62 33 W 64 750 S 62 550 W 64 750 62 550 Rocky bluff at the south side of the mouth of Wheatstone Glacier First roughly surveyed by the BelgAE under Gerlache convert 1897 99 The name originated when two members of the FIDS were camped immediately below this bluff in May 1956 and a fall of rock from the bluff flattened a bird outside their tent 24 Porro Bluff edit 64 45 S 62 33 W 64 750 S 62 550 W 64 750 62 550 Bluff lying south of Birdsend Bluff and overlooking Errera Channel Shown on an Argentine government chart of 1950 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for Ignazio Porro 1795 1875 Italian engineer who in 1851 invented a prism combination important in the development of stereo plotting instruments 25 Orel Ice Fringe edit 64 46 S 62 36 W 64 767 S 62 600 W 64 767 62 600 A strip of coastal ice bordering the south side of Errera Channel between Beneden Head and Porro Bluff Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd in 1956 57 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for Eduard von Orel 1877 1941 Austrian surveyor who in 1905 designed the first stereoautograph for plotting maps directly from horizontal photographs 26 Deville Glacier edit 64 48 S 62 35 W 64 800 S 62 583 W 64 800 62 583 Glacier flowing along the south side of Laussedat Heights into Andvord Bay The glacier is shown on an Argentine government chart of 1952 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for Edouard G Deville 1849 1924 Surveyor General of Canada 1885 1924 who introduced and developed photogrammetric methods of survey in Canada from convert 1888 onward 27 Scheimpflug Nunatak edit 64 48 S 62 36 W 64 800 S 62 600 W 64 800 62 600 Nunatak in the mouth of Deville Glacier on Arctowski Peninsula Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd in 1956 57 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for Theodor Scheimpflug 1865 1911 Austrian pioneer of aerophotogrammetry 28 Laussedat Heights edit 64 47 S 62 30 W 64 783 S 62 500 W 64 783 62 500 A series of elevations extending eastward for 8 nautical miles 15 km 9 2 mi in the southwest part of Arctowski Peninsula Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd in 1956 57 Named by the UK APC in 1960 for Aime Laussedat 1819 1907 French military engineer the father of photogrammetry who pioneered the application of photography to survey from about convert 1851 onward 29 Nadjakov Glacier edit 64 45 10 S 62 23 20 W 64 75278 S 62 38889 W 64 75278 62 38889 A 5 5 kilometres 3 4 mi long and 2 kilometres 1 2 mi wide glacier on Arctowski Peninsula draining north northeastwards to enter the head of Beaupre Cove east of Stolze Peak Named after the Bulgarian physicist Georgi Nadjakov 1897 1981 who discovered the photoelectret state essential to modern photocopying 30 The Downfall edit 64 48 S 62 23 W 64 800 S 62 383 W 64 800 62 383 A mountain c 1 500 metres 4 900 ft high between the heads of Arago Glacier and Woodbury Glacier Mapped by the FIDS from photos taken by Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd in 1956 57 So named by the UK APC in 1960 because the feature marked the end of the route from Orel Ice Fringe by which members of the FIDS at Danco Island station had hoped in 1956 to reach Forbidden Plateau A very steep drop on the east side of the summit precludes further progress 31 References edit a b Alberts 1995 p 25 a b Graham Land and South Shetland BAS a b Birkenmajer 1995 p 48b Birkenmajer 1995 p 47 Alberts 1995 p 21 Anna Cove Alberts 1995 p 254 Alberts 1995 pp 546 547 Alberts 1995 p 701 Alberts 1995 p 411 Selvick Cove SCAR Cook 1900 p 160b Sophie Rocks SCAR Alberts 1995 p 179 Zeiss Needle SCAR Vidbol Glacier SCAR Alberts 1995 p 529 Henryk Peak SCAR Alberts 1995 p 595 Alberts 1995 p 813 Henryk Glacier SCAR Alberts 1995 pp 714 715 Alberts 1995 p 350 Alberts 1995 p 807 Alberts 1995 p 68 Alberts 1995 p 584 Alberts 1995 pp 545 546 Alberts 1995 p 186 Alberts 1995 p 652 Alberts 1995 p 422 Nadjakov Glacier SCAR Alberts 1995 p 198 Sources editAlberts Fred G ed 1995 Geographic Names of the Antarctic PDF 2 ed United States Board on Geographic Names retrieved 2023 12 03 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Board on Geographic Names Birkenmajer Krzystof 1995 Geology of Gerlache Strait West Antarctica I Arctowski Peninsula PDF Polish Polar Research 16 1 2 47 60 retrieved 2024 05 28 Cook Frederick A 1900 Through the First Antarctic Night 1898 1899 Graham Land and South Shetland Islands BAS British Antarctic Survey 2005 retrieved 2024 05 03 Henryk Glacier Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Henryk Peak Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Nadjakov Glacier Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Selvick Cove Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Sophie Rocks Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Vidbol Glacier Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Zeiss Needle Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arctowski Peninsula amp oldid 1226402149 Spigot Peak, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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