The Cordall Stacks ( 54°0′S 38°4′W / 54.000°S 38.067°W) are two conspicuous rock stacks, the eastern one joined to Bird Island, South Georgia, by a low isthmus, lying on the northwest side of the island 0.3 nautical miles (0.6 km) northwest of Jordan Cove. They were named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee for Peter A. Cordall, a member of the South Georgia Biological Expedition, 1958–59, who made a plane table survey of Bird Island. [1]
This article incorporates
public domain material from
"Cordall Stacks".
Geographic Names Information System.
United States Geological Survey.
The Cordall Stacks ( 54°0′S 38°4′W / 54.000°S 38.067°W) are two conspicuous rock stacks, the eastern one joined to Bird Island, South Georgia, by a low isthmus, lying on the northwest side of the island 0.3 nautical miles (0.6 km) northwest of Jordan Cove. They were named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee for Peter A. Cordall, a member of the South Georgia Biological Expedition, 1958–59, who made a plane table survey of Bird Island. [1]
This article incorporates
public domain material from
"Cordall Stacks".
Geographic Names Information System.
United States Geological Survey.