Casey Range

Casey Range is a jagged, razor-backed ridge and a few nunataks in a line extending north-south, standing 8 miles west of David Range, in the Framnes Mountains. Discovered by the British Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition (BANZARE), 1929–31, under Douglas Mawson, who named it for Rt. Hon. Richard G. Casey.[1]

Further reading

• United States. Defense Mapping Agency. Hydrographic Center, Sailing Directions for Antarctica: Includes Islands South of Latitude 60.̊, P 293
gollark: It uses just one 4-byte key which it XORs with everything and yet people weren't able to trivially reverse it?
gollark: It's reading a key from memory somewhere, doesn't mean it uses the *same* key for everything.
gollark: No sensible cryptographic algorithm would XOR all the data with exactly the same thing, because that would, as you demonstrated, be hilariously insecure.
gollark: Sure. But it would be easy to make it not do that. I could do that, even.
gollark: Oh, you mean the malware is really stupid and uses a hardcoded key?

References


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