Ferrero Bay

Ferrero Bay is a body of water about 15 nautical miles (30 km) wide, lying immediately west of Cosgrove Ice Shelf and occupying the outer (west) part of the embayment between King Peninsula and Canisteo Peninsula. It was mapped from air photos taken by U.S. Navy Operation Highjump in December 1946, and was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Lieutenant Commander H. H. Ferrero, communications officer on the staff of the Commander, U.S. Navy Support Force, Antarctica, 1966–68.[1]

Further reading

• Majewski, Wojciech. (2013), Benthic foraminifera from Pine Island and Ferrero bays, Amundsen Sea, Polish Polar Research. 34. 10.2478/popore-2013-0012
• Minzoni, R. T., Majewski, W., Anderson, J. B., Yokoyama, Y., Fernandez, R., & Jakobsson, M. (2017), Oceanographic influences on the stability of the Cosgrove Ice Shelf, Antarctica, The Holocene, 27(11), 1645–1658. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959683617702226
• Minzoni, R. T.; Anderson, J. B.; Majewski, W.; Yokoyama, Y.; Fernandez, R.; Jakobsson, M., Oceanographic Influences on Ice Shelves and Drainage in the Amundsen Sea, American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2016, abstract #C41B-0664
gollark: Interesting.
gollark: If your brain loses oxygen input for something like 10 seconds, you become unconscious, and it fully shuts down given a few minutes or something like that.
gollark: Oxygen is needed to run aerobic respiration. Aerobic respiration is needed by lots of body stuff - muscles can run on anaerobic respiration for a bit, but not things like the brain.
gollark: I mean, you can go without oxygen input for a few minutes (I think because of stuff held in the lungs, though - stopping time would break absorption of that), but stuff does actually need it.
gollark: You can't just "not require oxygen".


References

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


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