– Triassic metasediments of the Trinity Peninsula Group, Early Cretaceous lavas, agglomerates and tuffs of the Antarctic Peninsula Volcanic Group, and Mid-Cretaceous adamellite, granite, granodiorite, diorite, tonalite and gabbro plutons of the Andean Intrusive Suite.
[4] The Arctowski Peninsula was discovered by the Belgian Antarctic Expedition (BelgAE), 1897–99, under Adrien de Gerlache.
A cove immediately east of Cape Anna at the north end of Arctowski Peninsula.
Fourcade, South African surveyor who designed the stereogoniometer and gave it practical application for plotting photogrammetric surveys in about 1900.
A conspicuous black peak 285 metres (935 ft) high, marking the south side of the entrance to Orne Harbor.
The name, given by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) in 1956, is descriptive of the appearance of the feature; a spigot is a wooden peg.
A small group of land rocks, midway between Spigot Peak and Zeiss Needle [Mount Dedo], overlooking Selvick Cove to the W, and Orne Harbour to the E, Arctowski Peninsula.
Conspicuous needle-like peak, 695 metres (2,280 ft) high, standing south of Orne Harbor on the west coast of Graham Land.
The name appears on an Argentine government chart of 1954 and is descriptive, "dedo" meaning finger in Spanish.
Flowing northwestwards west of Henryk Peak and east of Mount Dedo to enter Gerlache Strait at Orne Harbour.
A dark pinnacle rock 1.5 nautical miles (2.8 km; 1.7 mi) southwest of Mount Dedo.
A peak near the east part of Wild Spur on Arctowski Peninsula, on the west coast of Graham Land.
Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Heinrich Wild (1833-1902), Swiss instrument designer responsible for the autograph, first used about 1924 for stereosurvey from ground stations and later adapted for air survey.
Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Franz Stolze, a German scientist who in 1881 suggested improvements in methods of air photography and, in 1892, first established the principle of the "floating mark|used in stereophotogrammetry, later developed by Pulfrich.
Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Arthur Freiherr von Hübl (1853-1932), Austrian surveyor, head of the topographic section of the Militargeographische Institut, Vienna, who in 1894 designed a stereocomparator which was developed independently by Doctor Carl Pulfrich in 1901.
Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Sir Charles Wheatstone (1802-75), English scientist and inventor who designed the first mirror stereoscope in 1832.
Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Ignazio Porro (1795-1875), Italian engineer who in 1851 invented a prism combination, important in the development of stereo-plotting instruments.
A strip of coastal ice bordering the south side of Errera Channel between Beneden Head and Porro Bluff.
Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Eduard von Orel (1877-1941), Austrian surveyor who in 1905 designed the first stereoautograph for plotting maps directly from horizontal photographs.
A series of elevations extending eastward for 8 nautical miles (15 km; 9.2 mi) in the southwest part of Arctowski Peninsula.
Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Aimé Laussedat (1819-1907), French military engineer, the "father of photogrammetry," who pioneered the application of photography to survey from about 1851 onward.
Named after the Bulgarian physicist Georgi Nadjakov (1897-1981) who discovered the photoelectret state essential to modern photocopying.
So named by the UK-APC in 1960 because the feature marked the end of the route from Orel Ice Fringe by which members of the FIDS at Danco Island station had hoped in 1956 to reach Forbidden Plateau.