Hull Point (62°9′S 58°11′W / 62.150°S 58.183°W / -62.150; -58.183) is a low promontory on the northeast side of Legru Bay on King George Island in the South Shetland Islands, rising about 15 metres (50 ft) above sea level.
It comprises a whale-back ridge aligned in a northwest–southeast orientation and is backed on the northeast side by a sandy beach.
It was named for Professor Edward Hull, LLD, FRS, FGS, a stratigrapher from Ulster, and a structural and economic geologist.
He worked with the British Geological Survey on the coalfields of England and Wales and briefly in Scotland where he compiled outstanding drift maps of Glasgow.
[1] This article incorporates public domain material from "Hull Point".