GEOGRAPHIC NAMES OF ANTARCTICA 



control stations along Queen Mary, Knox and Budd 

 Coasts. 



DUBOUZET, CAPE : the NE. extremity of Palmer 

 Pen.; in 63°16'S., 57°02'W. Named in 1838 by a 

 Fr. exp. under D'Urville, who first succeeded 

 in outlining the N. coast of Louis Philippe Penin- 

 sula. Named by D'Urville for Lieutenant Du 

 Bouzet of the exp. ship Zelee. The approved spell- 

 ing form has been established by usage. 



Duce Bay: see Duse Bay. 



Du Chaylard, He: see Duchaylard Island. 



DUCHAYLARD ISLAND: island about 2.5 mi. 

 long and 1.5 mi. wide, which lies in Grandidier 

 Chan, about 1.5 mi. SE. of Vieugue I. and 11 mi. 

 WNW. of Cape Garcia, off the W. coast of Palmer 

 Pen.; in 65°43'S., 65°08'W. Disc, by the FrAE, 

 1903-5, under Charcot, and named by him for Mon- 

 sieur du Chaylard, French Minister Plenipotentiary 

 at Montevideo, Uruguay. The recommended spell- 

 ing follows that of Bongrain's report of 1914. Not 

 adopted: He du Chaylard [French]. 



DUCLOZ HEAD: headland which forms the NW. 

 side of the entrance to Undine South Hbr. on the 

 S. coast of South Georgia; in 54°30'S., 36°39'W. 

 The headland was first charted in 1819 by a Russ. 

 exp. under Bellingshausen. Named by the Br-APC, 

 following a survey by the SGS, 1951-52, after Le 

 Sieur Ducloz Guyot, a passenger in the Spanish 

 vessel Leon, which resighted South Georgia in 1756. 



DUCORPS, CAPE: prominent bulb-shaped head- 

 land, about 3 mi. long, joined to the coast by a 

 narrow isthmus, lying between Capes Roquemaurel 

 and Legoupil on the NW. coast of Louis Philippe 

 Pen.; in 63°24'S., 58°08'W. Disc, by a Fr. exp., 

 1837-40, under D'Urville, and named by him for 

 Louis Ducorps, a member of the exp. The cape 

 was re-identified and charted by the FIDS in 1946. 



DUDLEY, MOUNT: mountain, more than 5,500 

 ft. in el., standing at the head of Neny Fjord and 

 bounded on the N. and E. side by Neny Trough, 

 on the W. coast of Palmer Pen.; in 68°16'S., 

 66°30'W. The W. side of this mountain was first 

 roughly surveyed in 1936 by the BGLE under Ry- 

 mill. It was surveyed in entirety in 1940 by the 

 US AS. The feature was photographed from the 

 air and ground by the RARE, 1947-48, under 

 Ronne, who named it for Harold M. Dudley, Exec. 

 Sec. of the American Council of Commercial Labo- 

 ratories, Inc., Washington, D. C, who procured 

 various types of equipment and arranged finan- 

 cial aid for RARE. 



Duemler, Cape: see Robinson, Cape. 



DUEMLER, MOUNT: mountain, about 7,300 ft. 

 in el., rising SW. of the head of Anthony Gl., and 

 about 11 mi. W. of Mt. Bailey, inland from the E. 

 coast of Palmer Pen.; in 70°01'S., 63°45'W. This 

 feature was first charted by the BGLE under Ry- 

 mill in 1936-37. It was photographed from the 

 air by the USAS, in 1940, and the RARE under 

 Ronne, in 1947, and recharted in 1947 by a joint 

 sledge party consisting of members of the RARE 

 and FIDS. Named by Ronne for R. F. Duemler, 

 vice-pres. of the Delaware, Lackawanna and West- 

 ern Coal Co., New York, which contributed coal to 

 the expedition. 



Dufaure de Lajarte Islands: see Lajarte Islands. 



DUFAYEL ISLAND : island lying near the center 

 of Ezcurra Inlet, Admiralty Bay, in the South Shet- 

 land Is.; in 62°09'S., 58°34'W. Charted and named 

 in December 1909 by the FrAE under Charcot. 



Duffs Straits: see McFarlane Strait. 



DU FIEF, SIERRA: mountain range with nu- 

 merous sharp peaks, the highest about 4,600 ft. in 

 el., extending in a NE.-SW. direction about 4 mi., 

 in the SW. half of Wiencke I., in the Palmer Arch.; 

 in 64°52'S., 63°28'W. Disc, by the BelgAE, 1897-99; 

 under De Gerlache, and named by him for J. Du 

 Fief, at that time Gen. Sec. of the Belgian Royal 

 Geographical Society. Not adopted: Sierra du 

 Fief. 



DUGDALE GLACIER: glacier descending from 

 the high plateau of northern Victoria Land into 

 Robertson Bay where it merges with Murray Gl. 

 NW. of Duke of York I.; in about 71°35'S., 169°56'E. 

 First charted in 1899 by the BrAE under C. E. 

 Borchgrevink, who named it for Frank Dugdale, 

 Esq., of Snitterfield, Stratford-on-Avon. 



DUKE ERNST BAY: bay, about 7 m. wide at the 

 entrance and about 10 mi. long, lying between the 

 shore of Luitpold Coast and the Filchner Ice Shelf; 

 in about 77°50'S., 35°00'W. Disc, in 1912 by the 

 GerAE under Filchner. Upon discovery Filchner 

 named the bay for Capt. Richard Vahsel of the exp. 

 ship Deutschland. He renamed it Herzog Ernst 

 Bay after large portions of the ice shelf broke away, 

 forming a much larger bay. , Not adopted : Hertug 

 Ernst Bay, Herzog Ernst Bay [German], Vahsel 

 Bay. 



DUKE OF YORK ISLAND: mountainous island 

 lying in the S. part of Robertson Bay, along the N. 

 coast of Victoria Land; in about 71°37'S., 170°03'E. 

 First charted in 1899 by the BrAE under C. E. 

 Borchgrevink, who named it for the Duke of York. 



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