Remus Glacier
Remus Glacier (68°20′S 66°43′W) is a glacier, 8 nautical miles (15 km) long, which flows from the north slopes of Mount Lupa northwestward along the northeast side of the Blackwall Mountains into Providence Cove, Neny Fjord, on the west coast of Graham Land. The lower reaches of the glacier were first roughly surveyed in 1936 by the British Graham Land Expedition (BGLE) under Rymill. Resurveyed in 1948-49 by the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS), who so named it for its association with Romulus Glacier, whose head lies near the head of this glacier.
Further reading
• Peter Gibbs, A memoir of time in the Antarctic 1956-59
• Jane G. Ferrigno, Alison J. Cook, Amy M. Mathie, Richard S. Williams, Jr., Charles Swithinbank, Kevin M. Foley, Adrian J. Fox, Janet W. Thomson, and Jörn Sievers, Coastal-Change and Glaciological Map of the Larsen Ice Shelf Area, Antarctica: 1940–2005, USGS
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gollark: Exactly. 360.
gollark: One semihyperironic proposal was to just ban employers from knowing or asking if you have a university degree.
gollark: Rewiring the whole system built on it is really hard.
gollark: The most politically feasible path to fixing that if people complain is just to throw money at subsidizing it.
External links
References
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