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Mount Weaver (Antarctica)

Mount Weaver is a mountain standing 3 km west of Mount Wilbur at the head of Scott Glacier, in the Queen Maud Mountains of Antarctica. Discovered and ascended in December 1934 by members of the Byrd AE geological party under Quin Blackburn.


Gould Coast (Antarctica)

The Gould Coast lies at the head of the Ross Sea in Antarctica, on the eastern side. Where it meets Amundsen Coast, which lies on the western side, is Scott Glacier, whose tongue represents the world's southernmost coastline, at .


Grizzly Peak (Antarctica) (Antarctica)

Grizzly Peak () is a peak rising to 2,200 m on the southwest flank of Mount Zanuck, in the Gothic Mountains, Queen Maud Mountains. The feature was visited in December 1934 by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition geological party and was included in "Darryl Zanuck Mountain.


Tapley Mountains (Antarctica)

The Tapley Mountains () is a mountain range fronting on the eastern side of Scott Glacier, extending eastward for 56 km (35 mi) between Leverett and Albanus Glaciers in the Queen Maud Mountains.


Leverett Glacier (Antarctica)

Leverett Glacier in Antarctica () is about 80 km (50 mi) long and 4 to 6 km (3 to 4 mi) wide, draining northward from the Watson Escarpment, between the California and Stanford Plateaus, and then trending WNW between the Tapley Mountains and Harold Byrd Mountains to terminate at the head of the Ross Ice Shelf close east of Scott Glacier. It was discovered in December 1929 by the Byrd AE geological party under Laurence Gould, and named by him for Frank Leverett, eminent geologist at the University of Michigan and authority on glacial geology of the central United States.


Mount Wilbur (Antarctica) (Antarctica)

Mount Wilbur () is a mountain standing 3.2 km (2 mi) east of Mount Weaver at the head of Scott Glacier, in the Queen Maud Mountains, Antarctica.


Mount Roland (Antarctica) (Antarctica)

Mount Roland () is a mountain, 2,210 m, directly north of Mount Mooney on the north flank of Robison Glacier, in the Queen Maud Mountains. Mapped by United States Geological Survey (USGS) from surveys and U.


Mount Blackburn (Antarctica) (Antarctica)

Mount Blackburn () is a massive, flat-topped mountain, 3,275 m (10,744 ft), standing just east of Scott Glacier where it surmounts the southwest end of California Plateau and the Watson Escarpment, in the Queen Maud Mountains.


Rockefeller Plateau (Antarctica)

Rockefeller Plateau () is that portion of the interior ice plateau of Marie Byrd Land lying eastward of Shirase Coast and Siple Coast and southward of the Ford Ranges, Flood Range and Executive Committee Range, centering near the coordinates given above. Much of its extensive, ice-covered surface is from 1,000 to 1,500 m above sea level.


Siple Coast (Antarctica)

Siple Coast () is the middle portion of the relatively ill-defined coast along the east side of the Ross Ice Shelf, between the north end of Gould Coast () and the south end of Shirase Coast (). It was named by NZ-APC in 1961 after Paul A.


Siple Coast (Antarctica)

Siple Coast () is the middle portion of the relatively ill-defined coast along the east side of the Ross Ice Shelf, between the north end of Gould Coast () and the south end of Shirase Coast (). It was named by NZ-APC in 1961 after Paul A.


Siple Coast (Antarctica)

Siple Coast () is the middle portion of the relatively ill-defined coast along the east side of the Ross Ice Shelf, between the north end of Gould Coast () and the south end of Shirase Coast (). It was named by NZ-APC in 1961 after Paul A.


Shirase Coast (Antarctica)

Shirase Coast () is the north segment of the relatively ill-defined coast along the east side of Ross Ice Shelf and Ross Sea, lying between the north end of Siple Coast (about ) and Cape Colbeck. Named by NZ-APC in 1961 after Lieutenant Nobu Shirase (1861-1946), leader of the Japanese expedition, whose ship Kainan Maru sailed near this coast in January 1912.