[2][3] The name, recommended by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) in 1948, commemorates Captain Jules Dumont d'Urville's 1838 exploration of the Trinity Peninsula area, which he had named "Terre Louis Philippe," after Louis Philippe I, the King of France at the time.
A flat ice-covered saddle of elevation 793 metres (2,602 ft)[5] high, which links Marescot Ridge to the northwest to Louis-Philippe Plateau to the southeast.
An ice-covered col of elevation over 1,131 metres (3,711 ft)[7] high that links Snegotin Ridge to the north to the west part of Louis-Philippe Plateau to the south.
An ice-covered ridge rising to 1,230 metres (4,040 ft)[9] high on the northwest side of Louis-Philippe Plateau.
An ice-covered bluff of elevation 1,043 metres (3,422 ft)[13] high forming the south extremity of Louis-Philippe Plateau.
Named after the German-Austrian geologist Ferdinand von Hochstetter (1829-1884) who worked in Bulgaria, other European countries and New Zealand.
An ice-covered peak rising to 848 metres (2,782 ft)[21] high in the north foothills of Louis-Philippe Plateau.
An ice-covered peak rising to 1,026 metres (3,366 ft)[23] high in the north foothills of Louis-Philippe Plateau.
An ice-covered hill rising to 716 metres (2,349 ft)[25] high in the north foothills of Louis-Philippe Plateau.
A hill approximately 932 metres (3,058 ft) high, which rises 7 nautical miles (13 km; 8.1 mi) south-southeast of the north end of Cape Ducorps.
Named after José N. Guerrero Villarroel, of the cutter Yelcho of the Chilean Navy, who participated in the rescue of the shipwrecked of Sir Ernest Shackleton's British Expedition in 1916.
A mountain, 1,085 metres (3,560 ft) high, standing close north of the east end of Louis Philippe Plateau.
[28] This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Geological Survey.