Map: | Antarctica |
Country Type: | Continent |
Country: | Antarctica |
Part Type: | Area |
Part: | Marie Byrd Land |
Range: | Ford Ranges |
The Allegheny Mountains are a small group of mountains west of the Clark Mountains in the Ford Ranges of Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica.
The Allegheny Mountains are north of the upper Boyd Glacier and the Mackay Mountains, east of the Sarnoff Mountains and west of the Clark Mountains.Features, from west to east, include Mount Darling, Mount Spencer, Mount Tolley, Mount Swartley, Mount Zeigler and Cady Nunatak.Isolated features to the north and east include the Mathis Nunataks, Spaulding Rocks and Breeding Nunatak.
The Allegheny Mountains were discovered on aerial exploration flights in 1934 by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition (ByrdAE) and subsequently mapped from aerial flights and ground surveys by the United States Antarctic Service (USAS) from 1939 to 1941. They were named by the USAS for Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania which is the alma mater of Paul Siple, leader of the United States Antarctic Service West Base.
-77.25°N -163°W. The highest peak of the Allegheny Mountains, standing west of Mount Swartley. Discovered on aerial flights from the West Base of USAS in 1940.Named for Professor Chester A. Darling of Allegheny College.
-77.2833°N -163°W. A peak south of Mount Darling. Discovered on aerial flights from West Base of the USAS (1939-41).Named for Herbert R. Spencer of Erie, Pennsylvania, the Sea Scout commander of Paul Siple, leader of the West Base party of that expedition.
-77.2833°N -150°W. A peak, high, standing south of Mount Swartley.Discovered on aerial flights from West Base of the USAS (1939-41).Named for president William P. Tolley of Allegheny College.
-77.25°N -155°W. A peak east of Mount Darling. Discovered on aerial flights from West Base of the USAS (1939–41).Named for Professor Stanley Swartley of Allegheny College.
-77.2167°N -146°W. A mountain high north-northeast of Mount Swartley. Mapped by USAS (1939–41) and by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) from surveys and United States Navy air photos (1959-65). Named by the United States Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for Lieutenant Commander Luther L. Zeigler, United States Navy, pilot on LC-130F Hercules aircraft flights during Operation Deep Freeze 1968.
-77.2167°N -193°W. A nunatak east of Mount Zeigler in the northeast part of the Allegheny Mountains. Mapped by USGS from surveys and United States Navy air photos, 1959-65. Named by US-ACAN for Frederick M. Cady, United States Antarctic Research Program (USARP) ionospheric physicist at Byrd Station, 1968.
-77.1333°N -170°W. An isolated cluster of nunataks near the head of Arthur Glacier, east-southeast of Mount Warner. Mapped by USAS (1939-41) and by USGS from surveys and United States Navy air photos (1959-65). Named by US-ACAN for Terry R. Mathis, traverse engineer with the Byrd Station glaciological strain network, summer season (1967-68), and station engineer with the Byrd Station winter party (1968).
-77°N -159°W. A somewhat isolated group of rocks lying northeast of Mount Warner. Mapped by USAS (1939-41) and by USGS from surveys and United States Navy air photos (1959-65). Named by US-ACAN for Howard R. Spauiding, United States Navy, builder at Byrd Station in 1966.
-77.0667°N -170°W. An isolated nunatak northeast of the Allegheny Mountains. Mapped by USGS from surveys and United States Navy air photos, 1959-65. Named by US-ACAN for George H. Breeding, storekeeper, United States Navy, of Byrd Station, 1967.