Péwé Peak | |
Country Type: | Continent |
Region Type: | Region |
Region: | Victoria Land |
Coordinates: | -78.0333°N 203°W |
Map: | Antarctica |
Label: | Péwé Peak |
Péwé Peak (-78.0333°N 203°W) is a bedrock peak, high, composed of granite and topped with a dolerite sill. The peak is immediately south of Joyce Glacier and is surrounded by glacial ice except on the south side. It was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Troy L. Péwé, a glacial geologist with U.S. Navy Operation Deep Freeze, 1957–58, who personally explored this peak as well as adjacent portions of Victoria Land.
Péwé Peak is in the Denton Hills.Péwé Peak rises above Joyce Glacier to the north, and Lake Buddha to the west.Shangri-la is to the south and Catacomb Hill to the southwest.
-78.0167°N 205°W. Glacier immediately north of Péwé Peak, draining from the névé northeast of Catacomb Hill and terminating up-valley (west) of the snout of Garwood Glacier, which would have been a tributary to it in times of more intense glaciation. Named by the N.Z. Blue Glacier Party (1956-57) after Ernest Joyce, a member of British Antarctic expeditions of 1901-04, 1907-09 and 1914-17.
-78.0095°N 163.8384°W.A small hanging glacier on the southern slopes of Mount Alexandra. The glacier terminates on the cliffs north of Colleen Lake. The name, applied by New Zealand Geographic Board (NZGB) in 1994, is taken from an old spelling for the Shetland Islands of Scotland.
-78.0333°N 215°W. Small meltwater lake between the lower parts of Joyce Glacier and Garwood Glacier. It was first seen on the ground by U.S. geologist Troy L. Péwé on Jan. 14, 1958. He gave it the name Colleen because the feature is similar to many of the clear, reflecting lakes in Ireland.
-78.0467°N 163.6854°W. A small, flat glacial outwash plain, the surface of which is covered by the algae Nostoc. The feature is located east of the south lobe of Joyce Glacier. So named by the New Zealand Geographic Board (NZGB) in 1994.
-78.05°N 208°W. A large proglacial lake on the south margin of Joyce Glacier in the small valley known as Shangri-la. Named in association with Shangri-la by the New Zealand Victoria University of Wellington Antarctic Expedition (VUWAE), 1960-61.
-78.05°N 214°W.A mountain rising to at the east side of Lake Buddha. It was named by New Zealand Geographic Board (NZGB) in 1994; the name is suggested by the steep climb of the west side of the mountain.
-78.05°N 205°W. A small, secluded valley area completely isolated by mountain peaks, located immediately south of Joyce Glacier and Péwé Peak.The valley reminded personnel of the VUWAE (1960-61), who applied the name, of James Hilton's Shangri-la in Lost Horizon.
-77.9833°N 199°W. A group of hills rising to high between Brodie Ponds and Joyce Glacier, situated midway up the Blue Glacier on its east margin. Named in 1992 by US-ACAN after John A. Kelmelis, cartographer, USGS; Manager of Polar Programs, Office of International Activities, USGS, 1984-87.