GEOGRAPHIC NAMES OF ANTARCTICA 



graphs taken at that time. Named for H. E. 

 Hansen, Norwegian cartographer who has com- 

 piled maps for this and other Norwegian Antarctic 

 expeditions. 



HANSEN NUNATAK: beehive-shaped nunatak 

 about 2,600 ft. in el., lying near the middle of 

 Reeves Gl., a short distance above its terminus, in 

 Victoria Land; in about 74°46'S., 162°18'E. Disc, 

 by the BrNAE under Scott, 1901-4. Named by 

 BrAE under Shackleton, 1907-9. 



HANUSSE BAY: V-shaped bay, about 20 mi. 

 long in a general N.-S. direction and some 15 mi. 

 wide at its broad N. end, lying between Cape 

 Mascart, Adelaide I., and Cape Shmidt, Palmer 

 Pen.; in about 66°57'S., 67°30'W. Disc, and first 

 charted by the FrAE, 1908-10, under Charcot, and 

 named by him for the Dir. of the Hydrographic 

 Service of the French Navy. Not adopted : Hanusse 

 Fiord. 



Hanusse Fiord: see Hanusse Bay. 



HARBORD GLACIER: glacier about 3 mi. wide 

 descending between Mt. George Murray and Mt. 

 Smith to the coast of Victoria Land, where it forms 

 the Harbord Glacier Tongue; in about 75°58'S., 

 162°30'E. The glacier takes its name from the 

 Harbord Glacier Tongue, which was named by the 

 BrAE, 1907-9, under Shackleton. 



HARBORD GLACIER TONGUE: glacier tongue 

 about 1 mi. wide, forming the seaward extension of 

 Harbord Gl. along the coast of Victoria Land; in 

 about 75°57'S., 163°00'E. First charted by the 

 BrAE under Shackleton, at which time it extended 

 about 5 mi. into Ross Sea. Named by Shackleton 

 for A. E. Harbord, second officer of the exp. ship 

 Nimrod during the last year of the expedition. 

 Not adopted: Harbord Ice Tongue, Harbord Ice 

 Barrier Tongue. 



Harbord Ice Barrier Tongue; Harbord Ice 

 Tongue: see Harbord Glacier Tongue. 



HARBOUR GLACIER: a through glacier about 

 3 mi. long and 1.5 mi. wide, lying on the NW. 

 side of Wiencke I. and extending in a NE.-SW. di- 

 rection between the cove about 1 mi. E. of Noble 

 Peak and Peltier Chan., close S. of Port Lockroy, 

 in the Palmer Arch.; in 64°49'S., 63°26'W. Prob- 

 ably first seen by the BelgAE, 1897-99, under De 

 Gerlache. Charted in 1944 by the FIDS, who so 

 named it because of its nearness to the harbor of 

 Port Lockroy. 



Harbour Heights: see Arrival Heights. 



HARBOUR POINT: point separating Leith and 

 Stromness Harbors in Stromness Bay, South 

 Georgia; in 54°09'S., 36°41'W. This descriptive 



name was in use as early as 1920 and was prob- 

 ably applied by whalers operating from Stromness 

 Bay. 



HARCOURT, CAPE: cape which forms the N. 

 side of the entrance to Royal Bay, on the N. coast 

 of South Georgia; in 54°29'S., 35°58'W. The name 

 dates back to at least 1920 and is now well estab- 

 lished in international usage. Not adopted: Cape 

 Royal. 



HARCOURT, MOUNT: mountain in the Com- 

 monwealth Range, overlooking the E. side of 

 Beardmore Gl. at its junction with Ross Ice Shelf; 

 in about 83°46'S., 173°00'E. Disc, and named by 

 the BrAE, 1907-9, under Shackleton. 



HARDY POINT : western point of Bellingshausen 

 I., in the South Sandwich Is.; in 59°25'S., 27°04'W. 

 Charted in 1930 by DI personnel on the Discovery 

 II, who named it for Alister C. Hardy, member of 

 the zoological staff of the Discovery Committee, 

 1924-28, and prof, of zoology at University College 

 of Hull. 



HARGREAVES GLACIER: distributary glacier 

 above 2 mi. wide and 8 mi. long, fiowing NNW. 

 from the lower reaches of Polar Times Gl., and 

 terminating at the S. side of Sandefjord Ice Bay 

 about 2 mi. W. of Mt. Caroline Mikkelsen, on In- 

 grid Christensen Coast; in about 69°42'S., 73°46'E. 

 Delineated in 1952 by John H. Roscoe from USN 

 Op. Hjp. aerial photographs taken in March 1947, 

 and named by him for R. B. Hargreaves, aerial 

 photographer on USN Op. Hjp. flights which ob- 

 tained photographic coverage in this area and 

 other coastal areas between 14° and 164°, east 

 longitude. Not adopted: Margreaves Glacier. 



Hariholm: see Marinholm. 



HARKER, MOUNT: mountain of the Gonville 

 and Caius Range, about 3,000 ft. in el., forming 

 the N. wall of Debenham Gl. near its head, in 

 Victoria Land; in about 77°16'S., 161°53'E. 

 Charted by the BrAE under Scott, 1910-13, and 

 named for Dr. Alfred Harker, noted British 

 petrologist. 



HARKER GLACIER: glacier which flows in a 

 NE. direction to the SW. end of Moraine Fjord, 

 in Cumberland East Bay, South Georgia; in 

 54°22'S., 36°31'W. This glacier appears to be 

 flrst indicated on a 1912 geological map of South 

 Georgia by David Ferguson. Probably named for 

 Alfred Harker. 



HARKER POINT: point which forms the S. end 

 of Bristol I., in the South Sandwich Is.; in 59°04'S., 

 26°31'W. Charted in 1930 by DI personnel on 



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