Cordiner Peaks

The Cordiner Peaks are a group of peaks extending over an area of 6 nautical miles (11 km), standing 8 nautical miles (15 km) southwest of Dufek Massif in the northern part of the Pensacola Mountains. They were discovered and photographed on January 13, 1956 in the course of a transcontinental nonstop plane flight by personnel of U.S. Navy Operation Deep Freeze I from McMurdo Sound to the Weddell Sea and return. They were named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Captain Douglas L. Cordiner, U.S. Navy, an observer on the P2V-2N Neptune aircraft making this flight. The entire Pensacola Mountains were mapped by the United States Geological Survey in 1967 and 1968 from ground surveys and from U.S. Navy tricamera aerial photographs taken in 1964.[1]

Features

Geographical features include:

gollark: heav_: yes, the sandbox naively detects "disk" at the start of things.
gollark: Really? Hm.
gollark: I have homes in many of the slightly hidden rooms so I can show you them. There are probably lots of weird places I haven't seen.
gollark: It also isn't very obviously accessible or documented.
gollark: Mostly chorus fruit or having homes there already somehow.

References


 This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Geological Survey document: "Cordiner Peaks". (content from the Geographic Names Information System)


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