GEOGRAPHIC NAMES OF ANTARCTICA 



HATREE, CAPE: cape which forms the SW. tip 

 of Mossman Pen., on the S. coast of Laurie I., in 

 the South Orkney Is.; in 60"48'S., 44°44'W. Disc, 

 on the joint cruise in December 1821 by Capt. 

 George Powell and Capt. Nathaniel Palmer. The 

 name appears on Powell's map published in 1822. 

 Not adopted: Cape McVitie. 



HAUBERG MOUNTAINS: mountains about 6,000 

 ft. in el. on Joerg Plateau, lying immediately baclc 

 of Orville Escarpment; in about 76°48'S., 68°00'W. 

 Disc, by the RARE, 1947-48, under Ronne, and 

 named by him for John Hauberg, of Rock Island, 

 111., a contributor to the expedition. 



HAUGE REEF : chain of islets and rocks extend- 

 ing in an ENE. direction from the E. extremity of 

 Annenkov I. to a point about 3 mi. WSW. of Cape 

 Darnley, South Georgia; in 54°28'S., 37°59'W. 

 First charted in 1819 by a Russ. exp. under Bellings- 

 hausen. Surveyed by the SGS, 1951-52, and 

 named for Capt. Ole Hauge, of the sealer AWatros, 

 whose knowledge of the coasts of South Georgia 

 was of great assistance to the SGS, 1951-52. 



HAULAWAY POINT: small rocky point midway 

 along the NE. side of Stonington I., close off the W. 

 coast of Palmer Pen.; in 68°11'S., 67°00'W. First 

 surveyed by the US AS, 1939-41. Resurveyed in 

 1946-47 by the FIDS, who so named the point 

 because it is one of the best places for hauling 

 stores ashore. 



HAUPT NUNATAK: small nunatak projecting 

 above the continental ice at the N. side of the lower 

 reaches of Vanderford Gl., which is believed to mark 

 the approximate coastline in this portion of Budd 

 Coast where the continental ice extends for some 

 5 to 10 mi. into the SE. part of Vincennes Bay; in 

 about 66°32'S., 110''48'E. Delineated from aerial 

 photographs taken by USN Op. Hjp., 1946-47, and 

 named by the US-ACAN for Ens. Richard W. Haupt, 

 USN, assistant hydrographic officer with USN Op. 

 Wml., 1947-48, who assisted the shore parties which 

 established astronomical control stations from 

 Wilhelm II Coast to Budd Coast. 



Hauptinsel: see Br0de Island. 



Havre Fetter: see Potter Cove. 



HAVSBOTN: the narrow innermost portion of 

 Lutzow-Holm Bay, at its SE. head, between Prince 

 Olav and Prince Harald Coasts; in about 69°45'S., 

 38°45'E. Disc, by members of a Nor. exp. under 

 Christensen during aerial mapping flights in this 

 area in January and February, 1937. Literally 

 this name means "ocean gulf," and was applied by 



the old Norse to the polar sea north of Norway. 

 This feature was first shown and first named on 

 H. E. Hansen's Atlas of Parts of the Antarctic 

 Coastal Lands, 1946. 



HAVSTEIN ISLAND: rocky island about 3 mi. 

 long and 2 mi. wide, rising to about 410 ft. in el., 

 lying about 14 mi. NW. of the entrance to Stef- 

 ansson Bay about 2 mi. off Kemp Coast; in about 

 67'06'S., 58°51'E. Possibly first seen by DI per- 

 sonnel on the William Scoresby in February 1936, 

 but, if so, it was considered by them as part of the 

 mainland. Mapped as an island by Norwegian 

 cartographers from aerial photographs taken on a 

 Nor. exp. under Christensen in January-February 

 1937, and probably so named by them because of 

 its rocky nature and its seaward position. 



HAWKINS GLACIER: channel glacier about 2 

 mi. wide and 5 mi. long, flowing N. from the conti- 

 nental ice to the Knox Coast, about 10 mi. WNW. 

 of Underwood Gl.; in about 66°35'S., 107°35'E. 

 Delineated from aerial photographs taken by USN 

 Op. Hjp., 1946-47, and named by the US-ACAN for 

 Samuel N. Hawkins, sailmaker on the sloop of war 

 Vincennes of the USEE under Wilkes, 1838-42. 



HAWTHORNE, MOUNT: mountain about 3,400 

 ft. in el. in the Walker Mtns. on Thurston Pen.; in 

 about 72°25'S., 97°00'W. Disc, on Feb. 27, 1940, 

 by the USAS in a flight from the Bear, and named 

 for Roger Hawthorne, USAS field representative. 

 Not adopted: Mount Mark. 



HAYES, MOUNT: plateau-type mountain about 

 3,700 ft. in el., situated at the base of Cole Pen. 

 on the E. coast of Palmer Pen.; in 66°50'S., 64°10'W. 

 Charted in 1947 by the FIDS, who named it for 

 Rev. James Gordon Hayes, Antarctic historian and 

 author of Antarctica: A Treatise on the Southern 

 Continent and The Conquest of the South Fole. 



HAYES PEAK: peak about 800 ft. in el., lying 

 about 2 mi. S. of Cape Bruce on Mac-Robertson 

 Coast; in about 67°27'S., 60°50'E. Disc, on Feb. 

 18, 1931 by BANZARE under Mawson, and proba- 

 bly named by him for Rev. James Gordon Hayes. 

 Not adopted : Veslekulten [Norwegian] . 



HAYRICK ISLET: small prominent rock mass, 

 more than 500 ft. in el., between Lodge Rock and 

 Twig Rock in the Terra Firma Is., off the W. coast 

 of Palmer Pen.; in 68°42'S., 67°32'W. The Terra 

 Firma Is. were first visited and surveyed in 1936 

 by the BGLE under Rymill. This islet was sur- 

 veyed in 1948 by the FIDS and so named by them 

 because, when seen from the E., its high mass has 

 an appearance suggesting a hayrick. 



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