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Queen Elizabeth Range (Antarctica)

The Queen Elizabeth Range () is a rugged mountain range that parallels the eastern side of Marsh Glacier for nearly from Nimrod Glacier in the north to Law Glacier in the south. Mount Markham, high, is the highest elevation in the range.

Name

The Queen Elizabeth Range was named by J.H. Miller of the New Zealand party of the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition (CTAE; 1956–58) who, with G.W. Marsh, explored this area. It was named for Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, the patron of the expedition.

Location

The Queen Elizabeth Range is bounded to the north by the Nimrod Glacier, which separates it from the Churchill Mountains and Nash Range. To the east the Lowery Glacier and Robb Glacier separate it from the Holland Range. The Law Glacier to the south separates its from the Colbert Hills and Queen Alexandra Range. The Marsh Glacier separates it from the Miller Range to the west.

Major glaciers

Features

Prominent features or groups of features include:

  • Cotton Plateau (), a snow-covered plateau just east of the mouth of Marsh Glacier.
  • Svaton Peaks (), a cluster of rugged peaks at the north end of the Queen Elizabeth Range, surmounting the area between the mouths of the Heilman Glacier and Otago Glacier.
  • Sherwin Peak (), a peak, high, surmounting the east side of Otago Glacier southeast of Mount Chivers, in the north part of the Queen Elizabeth Range.
  • Mount Markham (), a majestic twin-peaked massif surmounting the north end of the Markham Plateau. The peaks have elevations of and .
  • Frigate Range (), a high mountain range extending east from Mount Markham in the Queen Elizabeth Range of Antarctica.
  • Mount Rabot (), a mountain, high, standing southeast of Mount Lecointe.
  • Moore Mountains (), a small but conspicuous group of mountains just north of New Year Pass in the Queen Elizabeth Range in Antarctica.
  • Ārai Terraces (), a series of crevassed terraces and icefalls close southward of Fazekas Hills, near the head of Lowery Glacier.
  • Prince Andrew Plateau (), an ice-covered plateau, about long and wide, lying south of Mount Rabot.
  • Peletier Plateau (), an ice-covered plateau, about long and wide, forming the southern part of Queen Elizabeth Range.

References

Sources