Named by US-ACAN for Martin A. Pomerantz, Director of the Barthol Research Foundation and Chairman of the U.S. Committee for the International Year of the Quiet Sun, who carried on cosmic ray studies in the McMurdo Sound area, 1959–60 and 1960-61.
A glacier about 8 miles (13 km) long which drains the east slopes of Pomerantz Tableland southward of Armstrong Platform, in the Usarp Mountains.
Named by US-ACAN for Merritt R. Helfferich, USARP worker in the field of ionospheric physics at South Pole Station, 1967-68.
A glacier, 6 miles (9.7 km) long, draining the southeast slopes of Pomerantz Tableland in the Usarp Mountains.
An isolated, mainly ice-covered nunatak consisting of hornblende, standing 4 miles (6.4 km) west of the Pomerantz Tableland.
A mountain, 1,610 metres (5,280 ft) high, on the east-central slopes of Pomerantz Tableland, 2 miles (3.2 km) southeast of Rinehart Peak.
Named by US-ACAN for Clarence A. Guenter, USARP worker in the field of physiopsychology at South Pole Station, 1967-68.
A noteworthy pointed rock peak, 2,045 metres (6,709 ft) high, on the southern spur of Pomerantz Tableland.
Named by US-ACAN for Mike B. Keim, USN, aerial photographer on flights by Squadron VX-6 in Victoria Land in 1962-63; returned to Antarctica in 1963-64.
Named by US-ACAN for Harry N. Williams of U.S. Navy Squadron VX-6, aerial photographer on flights over Victoria Land and other Antarctic areas in three summer seasons, 1960–63.
A cluster of notable nunataks lying southeastward of Pomerantz Tableland between Keim Peak and Lovejoy Glacier.