The Brown Hills are mostly made up of the Carlyon Granitoid, which includes an variably foliated, biotite-hornblende granodiorite and granite.
A small steeply crevassed glacier in the Brown Hills, flowing west between Bowling Green Plateau and Blank Peaks.
Mapped by the VUWAE (1962-63) and so named because in plan the glacier is shaped like the head and neck of a dog, with a moraine suggesting a collar and a glacial lake in the position of the ears.
A cluster of ice-free peaks occupying the isolated ridge between Bartrum and Foggydog Glaciers in the Brown Hills.
A small but prominent ice-covered plateau at the north side of the Brown Hills in the Cook Mountains.
Prof. Charles C. Rich, geologist and deputy leader of the VUWAE, was affiliated with Bowling Green State University, Ohio.
It runs east from the southern part of Bowling Green Plateau in the Brown Hills of the Cook Mountains.
It was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names after Karl W. Gatson of the United States Geological Survey (USGS), a topographic engineer on the joint 1975–76 USGS – British Antarctic Survey project to establish control points for Landsat mosaics of Palmer Land, and to establish geodetically tied independent survey nets in the Ellsworth Mountains and Antarctic Peninsula into a worldwide reference system using Doppler satellite control.
A large flat-topped hill at the east side of Bowling Green Plateau in the Cook Mountains.
Named after D. Wright, a member of the CTAE who accompanied Sir Edmund Hillary to the South Pole.