[1] Booth Island is off the east end of the Graham Coast on the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula.
It is high and rugged, and consists of two rocky masses joined by a low narrow peninsula of ice and snow.
Cholet Isle extends northeastward from the extremity of the major peninsula, with a bay lying between it and Vanssay Point.
Salpetriere Bay is a wide embayment on the western shore over which stands the steep slopes of Jeanne Hill and the adjoining peaks.
[1] The sea slug species Curnon granulosa was first described in 1906 from a single specimen found at 40 m depth at Booth Island.
A point north of Port Charcot along the west side of the Mount Lacroix peninsula, Booth Island.
First charted by the FrAE, 1903-05, and named for Doctor Brouardel, identified by Jean-Baptiste Charcot as a member of the Institut de France.
Charted by the FrAE, 1903-05, under Charcot, who named it for his father-in-law L. Cléry, an eminent French lawyer.
A prominent mountain with red vertical cliffs and a rounded summit, 640 metres (2,100 ft) high, surmounting the northeast end of Booth Island.
First charted by the FrAE under Doctor Jean-Baptiste Charcot, 1903-05, and named by him after the Hopital de la Salpetriere, a Paris hospital where his father, Doctor Jean Martin Charcot, founded a clinic for the treatment of nervous diseases.
A hill, 195 metres (640 ft) high, standing 0.25 nautical miles (0.46 km; 0.29 mi) northwest of Mount Guéguen and overlooking Port Charcot on Booth Island, in the Wilhelm Archipelago.
Discovered by the FrAE, 1903-05, under Jean-Baptiste Charcot, who named it for F. Guéguen, stoker on the Français, and later the Pourquoi Pas?.
First charted by the FrAE under Jean-Baptiste Charcot, 1903-05, and named by him for the sister of Ernest Gourdon, geologist of the expedition.
[16] In 2003, Australian mountaineer Damien Gildea called it "one of the most challenging unclimbed objectives on the Antarctic Peninsula".
[17] On 15 February 2006 the peak was reached by a group of Spanish alpinists, who still avoided the last 10–15 metres (32.8–49.2 ft) of the mushroomlike top.
A point on the west side of Booth Island which marks the south limit of Salpêtrière Bay.
First charted by the FrAE, 1903-05, and named by Jean-Baptiste Charcot for L. Poste, stoker on the ship Français.
A point marking the south side of the entrance to Libois Bay and the northwest end of the peninsula which forms the west extremity of Booth Island.
A small cove at the west side of Port Charcot, which indents the north end of Booth Island, in the Wilhelm Archipelago.
The extremity of a small peninsula which extends north into the west portion of Port Charcot, Booth Island.
A bay 1.5 nautical miles (2.8 km; 1.7 mi) wide indenting the north shore of Booth Island.
[26] A cairn at Port Charcot, with a wooden pillar and a plaque inscribed with the names of the members of the French expedition, has been designated a Historic Site or Monument (HSM 28), following a proposal by Argentina to the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting.
Discovered by the FrAE under Jean-Baptiste Charcot, 1903-05, and named by him for Raymond Rallier du Baty, merchant marine cadet who signed on as seaman on the ship Français.
Discovered by the FrAE, 1903-05, under Jean-Baptiste Charcot, who named it for Ernest Cholet, skipper of the ship Français, and later, the Pourquoi-Pas?.
First charted by the FrAE, 1903-05, and named by Jean-Baptiste Charcot for F. Maignan, a seaman of the Français who lost his life in a ship accident shortly after the expedition's departure from Le Havre.
Discovered by the FrAE, 1903-05, and named by Jean-Baptiste Charcot for M. Rozo, the cook on the ship Français.