Fry Glacier

[2] Fry Glacier flows past Shoulder Mountain to the north to enter Tripp Bay on the Ross Sea.

Narrow ice saddle at the head of Fry Glacier, about 4 nautical miles (7.4 km; 4.6 mi) west-southwest of Mount Douglas.

Discovered in 1957 by the New Zealand Northern Survey Party of the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition (CTAE) (1956-58) and named by them in association with Fry Glacier.

One of a group of nautical names in Convoy Range; the mapped form of the moraine protrudes like a bowsprit out from the end of Elkhorn Ridge.

Named by the New Zealand Northern Survey Party (1956-57) of the CTAE after the USCGC Northwind, an icebreaker in the main American convoy into McMurdo Sound that season.

A glacial slope, 1.2 nautical miles (2.2 km; 1.4 mi) wide, which is a distributary of Flight Deck Névé between Dotson Ridge and Flagship Mountain, in Convoy Range, Victoria Land.

The name was applied by a NZARP field party to commemorate an incident when the steering gear of a motor toboggan broke during the 1989-90 season.

A small glacier lobe, to the east and immediately below Forecastle Summit, which drains south into deglaciated Barnacle Valley.

Named by a 1976-77 Victoria University of Wellington Antarctic Expedition (VUWAE) field party after James K. Baxter (1926-72), New Zealand poet and social critic.

Evans Piedmont Glacier in southwest of map
Region to the west of the glacier