The Cobham Range trends in a northwest–southeast direction for about 20 nautical miles (40 km) in the southern part of the Churchill Mountains of the Ross Dependency, Antarctica.
So named by the Holyoake, Cobham, and Queen Elizabeth Ranges party of the NZGSAE (1964–65) because although from below it looked a simple climb, great difficulty was experienced in traversing it.
Peak, 2,230 metres (7,320 ft) high, standing 3 miles (4.8 km) northwest of Mount Kopere in the Cobham Range.
Kopere is the Maori word for arrow; the peak's triangular cross section from most directions suggests an arrowhead.
Named by the Holyoake, Cobham, and Queen Elizabeth Ranges party of the NZGSAE (1964-65) for M. Gray, postmaster and assistant radio officer at Scott Base, 1965.
So named by the Holyoake, Cobham, and Queen Elizabeth Ranges party of the NZGSAE (1964-65) because of the curiously wind-carved rock buttresses on top of the ridge.
A névé on the northwest side of Cobham Range which nourishes the Lucy and Prince Philip Glaciers, in the Churchill Mountains.
Named for Lt. Dennis A. Olson, USN, who flew the New Zealand party to the névé and supported it during the summer season.
Elongated nunatak, 1,960 metres (6,430 ft) high, standing west of Cobham Range in the lower portion of Lucy Glacier.
Raft-like nunatak, 1,300 metres (4,300 ft) high, surmounting the Cooper Icefalls in the center of Nimrod Glacier.
Seen by the northern party of the NZGSAE (1961-62) and named after the raft Kon-Tiki which drifted across the Pacific Ocean from east to west in 1947.