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.
Named by US-ACAN after John T. Emlen, biologist, University of Wisconsin, program leader who made penguin navigational studies on the Ross Ice Shelf, the interior of Victoria Land, and elsewhere in Antarctica, 1962-63.
The hills lie south of Gressitt Glacier and midway between Emlen Peaks and the Morozumi Range.
Named by US-ACAN for Robert A. Helliwell of Stanford University, Program Director for the USARP study of very low frequency (VLF) radio noise phenomena.
Named by US-ACAN for C. Stewart Gillmor, U.S. Exchange Scientist (ionospheric physics) at the Soviet Mirnyy Station in 1961.
A bold rock bluff at the north side of the mouth of Svendsen Glacier, in the Usarp Mountains of Antarctica.
It was mapped by the United States Geological Survey from surveys and U.S. Navy air photos, 1960–62, and was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for John C. McCain, a United States Antarctic Research Program biologist at McMurdo Station, 1967–68.
[11] 1,885 metres (6,184 ft) 70°20′S 159°33′E / 70.333°S 159.550°E / -70.333; 159.550A mountain standing higher and next westward of Mount Theaker along the north side of #Robilliard Glacier.
A mountain along the north wall of Robilliard Glacier, 3 mi NE of Mount Simmonds.
Named by US-ACAN for Staff Sergeant James K. Shields, United States Marine Corps (USMC), assigned to U.S. Navy Squadron VX-6 in Antarctica, 1962–63 and 1963-64.
During 1962, Shields served as navigator on aircraft in support of the USGS Topo West survey of this area.