Difference between revisions of "Martin Peninsula"

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[[File:Martin Peninsula Map.png|thumb|Map of the Martin Peninsula]]
[[File:Martin Peninsula Map.png|thumb|Map of the Martin Peninsula]]
The '''Martin Peninsula''' (74°20′S 114°30′W) is a peninsula about 96 km (60) mi long and 32 km (20 mi) wide that is ice covered except for a few rock outcrops along its margins, located between [[Getz Ice Shelf]] and [[Dotson Ice Shelf]] on the coast of [[Westarctica]]. The farthest point of the peninsula is Jacobsen Head.
The '''Martin Peninsula''' (74°20′S 114°30′W) is a peninsula about 96 km (60) mi long and 32 km (20 mi) wide that is ice covered except for a few rock outcrops along its margins, located between [[Getz Ice Shelf]] and [[Dotson Ice Shelf]] on the coast of [[Westarctica]]. The farthest point of the peninsula is Jacobsen Head. It includes the Murray Foreland and [[Tucker Point]]


It significantly dwarfs the nearby [[Spaulding Peninsula]].
It significantly dwarfs the nearby [[Spaulding Peninsula]].

Revision as of 11:45, 24 October 2019

Map of the Martin Peninsula

The Martin Peninsula (74°20′S 114°30′W) is a peninsula about 96 km (60) mi long and 32 km (20 mi) wide that is ice covered except for a few rock outcrops along its margins, located between Getz Ice Shelf and Dotson Ice Shelf on the coast of Westarctica. The farthest point of the peninsula is Jacobsen Head. It includes the Murray Foreland and Tucker Point

It significantly dwarfs the nearby Spaulding Peninsula.

Discovery and name

Martin Peninsula was delineated from aerial photographs taken by USN Operation Highjump in January 1947.

It was named by US-ACAN after Col. Lawrence Martin, USA (Ret.), American geographer and authority on Antarctic exploration with the Library of Congress; member of US-SCAN, 1943-46.

Features