Marshall Valley | |
Map: | Antarctica |
Map Size: | 180 |
Location: | Antarctica |
Coordinates: | -78.0667°N 176°W |
Marshall Valley (-78.0667°N 176°W) is a small valley in Antarctica, ice free except for Rivard Glacier at its western head. It is long, and wide, and lies between Garwood Valley and Miers Valley on the coast of Victoria Land.It is one of the McMurdo Dry Valleys.The valley is open to the Ross Sea to the east.
Marshall Valley was named by the New Zealand Blue Glacier Party (1956–1957) for Dr. Eric Marshall, surgeon and cartographer of the British Antarctic Expedition (BrAE; 1907–09), who accompanied Ernest Shackleton on his journey to within of the South Pole.
-78.05°N 169°W. A ridge to the east of Blue Glacier on Scott Coast, Victoria Land, running east–west and rising to about high between Garwood Valley and Marshall Valley. The feature was almost surely observed in 1903 by the Koettlitz Glacier party led by Lieutenant A. B. Armitage of the British National Antarctic Expedition (BrNAE), but it was first clearly mapped by Captain Robert F. Scott's second expedition, BrAE, 1910–1913. The ridge was named in association with Marshall Valley by the New Zealand Antarctic Place-Names Committee (NZ-APC) in 1982.
-78.0667°N 218°W. A glacier about long at the head of Marshall Valley. The glacier was observed and mapped by Troy L. Péwé, glacial geologist with United States Navy Operation Deep Freeze, 1957–1958. It was named by Péwé for Norman Rivard who was his assistant on this expedition.
-78.0667°N 182°W. A meltwater stream about long that flows through the Marshall Valley from the Rivard Glacier to the Koettlitz Glacier. The stream was observed by Troy L. Péwé, glacial geologist with United States Navy Operation Deep Freeze, 1957–1958. The name was applied by the NZ-APC and United States Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) in consultation, and derives from its location in Marshall Valley.
-78.069°N 164.424°WA point at the foot of Marshall Valley, Denton Hills, on the Scott Coast of Victoria Land. Named by US-ACAN (1994) after Douglas P. DeMaster, biologist, University of Minnesota; who conducted seal studies in 1976 and 1977 (McMurdo Sound), 1977 and 1978 (South Shetland Island), 1978 and 1979 (Palmer Archipelago).
-78.0833°N 164°WAn ice-free ridge near the center of Denton Hills on the Scott Coast of Victoria Land. The ridge rises to high and extends west-east between Marshall Valley and Miers Valley. Named Kahiwi Maihao Ridge by New Zealand Geographic Board (NZGB) in 1994, a Maori name meaning "finger ridge".