Fuchs Dome Explained

Map:Antarctica
Elevation M:1525
Location:Coats Land, Antarctica
Range:Shackleton Range
Coordinates:-80.6°N -77°W

Fuchs Dome (-80.6°N -77°W) is a large ice-covered dome rising over 1525m (5,003feet), between Stratton Glacier and Gordon Glacier in the central part of the Shackleton Range, Antarctica.

Exploration

It was first mapped in 1957 by the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition (CTAE) and named for Sir Vivian E. Fuchs, leader of the CTAE 1955–58.

Topology

The Shackleton Range is an ice-covered plateau between 1200and high that rises between two large glaciers.It is a rectangular horst rising above major fault zones now under the Slessor Glacier to the north and Recovery Glacier glacier to the south.The center of the range is covered by a long ice cap stretching from the Fuchs Dome in the west to Shotton Snowfield in the east, and bounded by cliffs as high as .

Fuchs Dome extends from Stratton Glacier east to Crossover Pass, where the plateau narrows to under in width.It has an average height of around, and gradually slopes to the north down to 1100to.There are steep ice slopes along the margins of the plateau, which often have crevasses and in some places have ice falls.The plateau surface is a discontinuous and faulted undulating peneplain, most visible on the south of the range.The flat areas free of ice at the edge of the Fuchs Dome and Shotton Snowfield and the table mountains that surround them are the remnants of the peneplain.

Features

Features surrounding the dome that are named on the 1983 United States Geological Survey map are (clockwise from west):

Stratton Glacier

See main article: Stratton Glacier. -80.3667°N -29°W. A glacier long, flowing north from Pointer Nunatak and then northwest to the north of Mount Weston, in the Shackleton Range. First mapped in 1957 by the CTAE and named for David G. Stratton, surveyor and deputy leader of the transpolar party of the CTAE in 1956-58.

Lister Heights

See main article: Lister Heights. -80.5167°N -63°W. Rock heights on the east side of Stratton Glacier, southwest of Flat Top in the west part of the Shackleton Range. First mapped in 1957 by the CTAE and named for Hal Lister, glaciologist with the transpolar party of the CTAE in 1956-58, and leader at the expedition's advance base, "South Ice," in 1957.

Flat Top

See main article: Flat Top (Coats Land). -80.45°N -44°W.Distinctive table mountain,, with steep rocky cliffs, northeast of Lister Heights in the west part of the Shackleton Range. First seen and given this descriptive name during the early reconnaissance flights of the CTAE, 1955-58. Visited and mapped by the CTAE in 1957.

Petersen Peak

See main article: Petersen Peak. -80.45°N -84°W. A rock peak standing southwest of Morris Hills in the north-central part of Shackleton Range. First mapped in 1957 by the CTAE and named for Hans C. Petersen, captain of the Danish ship Magga Dan which transported members of the CTAE to the Filchner Ice Shelf in 1956-57. Not: Peterson Peak.

Clarkson Cliffs

See main article: Clarkson Cliffs. -80.4667°N -31°W. Ice-covered cliffs marked by rock exposures, rising to at the northeast edge of Fuchs Dome, Shackleton Range. Photographed from the air by the U.S. Navy, 1967, and surveyed by BAS, 1968-71. Named by the UK-APC after Peter D. Clarkson, BAS geologist, Halley Station, 1968-70, who worked in the area for four seasons, 1968-71, 1977-78; Head, BAS Mineralogy, Geology and Geochemistry Section, 1976-89; at SPRI from 1989.

Gordon Glacier

See main article: Gordon Glacier. -80.2833°N -35°W. Glacier at least long, flowing north from Crossover Pass through the Shackleton Range to join Slessor Glacier. First mapped in 1957 by the CTAE and named after George P. Pirie-Gordon, member of the Committee of Management and treasurer of the CTAE, 1955-58.

Clayton Ramparts

See main article: Clayton Ramparts. -80.7333°N -52°W. A line of east–west cliffs rising to over at the south margin of Fuchs Dome, Shackleton Range. Surveyed by the CTAE, 1957, photographed from the air by the U.S. Navy, 1967, and further surveyed by BAS, 1968-71. Named by the UK-APC after Charles A. Clayton, BAS surveyor, Halley Station, 1969-71, who worked in the area.

Genghis Hills

See main article: Genghis Hills. -80.7333°N -30°W. Hills rising to to the south of Fuchs Dome and west of Stephenson Bastion, in the Shackleton Range. Photographed from the air by the U. S Navy, 1967, and surveyed by BAS, 1968-71.Named by the UK-APC in 1971 after Graham K. ("Genghis") Wright, BAS general assistant at Halley Station, 1968-71, who took part in the survey, 1969-70.