[3] 78°39′39″S 86°16′54″W / 78.66083°S 86.28175°W / -78.66083; -86.28175 (Copernix satellite image) A peak rising to 2,086 metres (6,844 ft)[4] high in the northern portion of Bastien Range.
[5] 78°44′06″S 85°57′43″W / 78.73500°S 85.96194°W / -78.73500; -85.96194 (Copernix satellite image) A peak rising to 1,623 metres (5,325 ft)[6] high in the central portion of Bastien Range.
[7] 78°46′04″S 86°29′13″W / 78.76783°S 86.48689°W / -78.76783; -86.48689 (Copernix satellite image) A peak rising to 1,773 metres (5,817 ft)[8] high in the central portion of Bastien Range in Ellsworth Mountains.
It is named after the Swiss natural history illustrator John James Wild (1824-1900), a member of the British 1872–76 Challenger expedition who took the first photographs in the Antarctic region in 1874.
[9] 78°49′14″S 85°55′11″W / 78.82064°S 85.91972°W / -78.82064; -85.91972 (Copernix satellite image) A peak rising to 2,044 metres (6,706 ft)[10] high in the southern portion of Bastien Range.
[11] 78°51′14″S 85°47′24″W / 78.85397°S 85.79000°W / -78.85397; -85.79000 (Copernix satellite image) A peak rising to 1,985 metres (6,512 ft)[12] in the southern portion of Bastien Range.
A small, linear group of nunataks that mark the south end of Bastien Range.
A small group of hills which lie between the south portion of the Bastien Range and the Minnesota Glacier.