GEOGRAPHIC NAMES OF ANTARCTICA 



in about 72°18'S., 5°05'E. Disc, by the GerAE, 

 1938-39, under Ritscher, and named for the proc- 

 urator of the German Lufthansa Corporation. 

 Not adopted: Haderich Mountains, Hadrich Berg 

 [German] . 



Haderich Mountains: see Haderich, Mount. 



Hadington, Mount: see Haddington, Mount. 



Hadrich Berg: see Haderich, Mount. 



HAEFELI GLACIER: glacier, about 2 mi. wide 

 and 6 mi. long, situated at the W. side of Finster- 

 walder Gl. and flowing SSW. toward the head of 

 Lallemand Fjord on the W. side of Palmer Pen.; in 

 about 67°17'S., 66°22'W. First surveyed in 1946- 

 47 by the FIDS, and named by them for Robert 

 Haefeli, Swiss glaciologist. 



HAFFNER GLACIER: steep valley glacier flow- 

 ing into Berg Bay, in the Robertson Bay area of 

 northern Victoria Land; in about 71°28'S., 

 169°21'E. First charted in 1899 by the BrAE under 

 C. E. Borchgrevink, who named it for Colonel 

 Haffner, Dir. of the Govt. Survey of Norway. 



Haggitts Pillar: see Haggits Pillar. 



HAGGITS PILLAR: column of rock about 200 ft. 

 in el., lying about 0.1 mi. W. of Scott I., some 315 

 mi. NNE. of Cape Adare, the NE. extremity of 

 Victoria Land; in about 67°24'S., 179°55'W. Disc, 

 in December 1902 by Capt. William R. Colbeck, 

 RNR, Commander of the Morning, relief ship to 

 the BrNAE, 1901-4, under Scott. Not adopted: 

 Haggit's Pillar, Haggitt's Pillar, Haggitts Pillar. 



HAINES GLACIER: glacier about 4 mi. wide, 

 flowing in an ESE. direction and joining Meinardus 

 Gl. immediately E. of Mt. Barkow, on the E. coast 

 of Palmer Pen.; in 73°21'S., 62°33'W. Disc, and 

 photographed from the air in December 1940 by 

 the USAS. During 1947 the glacier was photo- 

 graphed from the air by the RARE, who in con- 

 junction with the FIDS charted it from the ground. 

 Named by the FIDS for William C. Haines, Ameri- 

 can meteorologist and member of the Byrd Antarc- 

 tic Expeditions of 1928-30 and 1933-35, and joint 

 author of the meteorological reports of these two 

 expeditions. 



HAINES MOUNTAINS: extensive range of bro- 

 ken, ice-capped peaks about 2,500 ft. in el., forming 

 the SW. wall of Hammond Gl., in the Edsel Ford 

 Ranges in Marie Byrd Land; in about 77°30'S., 

 146°45'W. Disc, by the ByrdAE in 1934 and 

 named for William C. Haines.' 



Hal Flood, Mount: see Berlin, Mount. 



Hal Flood Bay: see Okuma Bay. 



Hal Flood Range, Mount: see Hal Flood Range. 



HAL FLOOD RANGE : snow-covered peaks about 

 7,000 ft. in el., with an abrupt, partly buried, north- 

 facing escarpment, lying along the 76th parallel 

 for a considerable distance, in about 134°W. in 

 Marie Byrd Land. Disc, by the ByrdAE in 1934 

 from a great distance. Reconnaissance flights of 

 the USAS, 1939-41, explored the range. The name 

 has subsequently been transferred from the princi- 

 pal peak disc, by the ByrdAE in 1934 to the entire 

 range. Not adopted: Mount Hal Flood Range. 



HALF MOON ISLAND: crescent-shaped island 

 about 1.25 mi. long, lying in the entrance to Moon 

 Bay on the E. side of Livingston I., in the South 

 Shetland Is.; in 62°36'S., 59°57'W. This island was 

 known to sealers in the area as early as 1822. The 

 name appears on a chart based upon a 1935 survey 

 by DI personnel on the Discovery II. Not adopted: 

 Johnsons Island. 



Hallet, Cape: see Hallett, Cape. 



HALLETT, CAPE : rugged headland about 10 mi. 

 S. of Cape Christie, midway between Cape Adare 

 and Coulman I., on the coast of Victoria Land; 

 in about 72°25'S., 170°55'E. Disc, in 1841 by a 

 Br. exp. under Ross, who named it for Thomas R. 

 Hallett, purser on one of the exp. ships, the Erebus. 

 Not adopted: Cape Hallet. 



Hamar0galten: see Sheehan Islands. 



Hamberg Fluss: see Penguin River. 



HAMBERG GLACIER: glacier which flows in an 

 ENE. direction from the NE. side of Mt. Sugartop 

 to the W. side of the head of Moraine Fjord, South 

 Georgia; in 54°21'S., 36°31'W. Charted by the 

 SwedAE, 1901-4, under Nordenskjold, who named 

 it for Axel Hamberg, Swedish geographer, miner- 

 alogist and Arctic explorer. 



HAMBERG LAKE : lake, about 0.5 mi. in diame- 

 ter, lying near the northern outlet of Hamberg 

 Glacier, about 1 mi. W. of Moraine Fjord, Cumber- 

 land East Bay, South Georgia; in 54°19'S., 36°32'W. 

 First surveyed by the SwedAE, 1901-4, under 

 Nordenskjold. The name derives from the nearby 

 Hamberg Glacier, and was given by A. Szielasko 

 who explored this vicinity in 1906. 



Hambourg Bay: see Hamburg Bay. 



HAMBURG BAY: bay indenting the NW. coast 

 of Anvers I. about 5 mi. SW. of Perrier Bay and 12 

 mi. NE. of Cape Albert de Monaco, in the Palmer 



149 



