Louise Boyd Land

Louise Boyd Land was first surveyed by Lauge Koch from the air in 1932 during the Three-year Expedition to East Greenland.

It is bound to the northwest, north and east by the Gerard de Geer Glacier.

In the southeast it is bound by the Isfjord, a branch of Kaiser Franz Joseph Fjord, beyond which lies Andrée Land.

To the west lies the Hamberg Glacier and a region of numerous nunataks, and beyond them the Greenland ice sheet.

[3] The highest mountain of Louise Boyd Land is marked as a 7,874-foot-high (2,400 m) peak in the Defense Mapping Agency Greenland Navigation charts.

Map of Northeastern Greenland