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blake+nunataks Latitude and Longitude:

74°10′S 66°40′E / 74.167°S 66.667°E / -74.167; 66.667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Blake Nunataks ( 74°10′S 66°40′E / 74.167°S 66.667°E / -74.167; 66.667) is a group of three low, flat-topped nunataks running in a line northeast–southwest between Wilson Bluff and Mount Maguire, near the head of Lambert Glacier. They were sighted by Flying Officer J. Seaton, RAAF, during a photographic flight in November 1956, and named by the Antarctic Names Committee of Australia for J.R. Blake, auroral physicist at Mawson Station in 1958.

References

  • Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from "Blake Nunataks". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.



blake+nunataks Latitude and Longitude:

74°10′S 66°40′E / 74.167°S 66.667°E / -74.167; 66.667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Blake Nunataks ( 74°10′S 66°40′E / 74.167°S 66.667°E / -74.167; 66.667) is a group of three low, flat-topped nunataks running in a line northeast–southwest between Wilson Bluff and Mount Maguire, near the head of Lambert Glacier. They were sighted by Flying Officer J. Seaton, RAAF, during a photographic flight in November 1956, and named by the Antarctic Names Committee of Australia for J.R. Blake, auroral physicist at Mawson Station in 1958.

References

  • Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from "Blake Nunataks". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.



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