Difference between revisions of "Mount Glossopteris"

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[[File:Canterbury-Spur from Mount Glossopteris.jpg|thumb|350px|New Zealand explorers at summit of Mount Glossopteris looking toward the Canterbury Spur]]
[[File:Canterbury-Spur from Mount Glossopteris.jpg|thumb|350px|New Zealand explorers at summit of Mount Glossopteris looking toward the Canterbury Spur]]
'''Mount Glossopteris''' (84°44′S 113°43′W) is a mainly [[ice]]-covered mountain 2,865 meters (9,400 ft) high which may be identified by the exposed horizontal bedding on the north face, located at the NE end of Buckeye Table. It is located in the [[Ohio Range]] of [[Westarctica]].
'''Mount Glossopteris''' (84°44′S 113°43′W) is a mainly [[ice]]-covered mountain 2,865 meters (9,400 ft) high which may be identified by the exposed horizontal bedding on the north face, located at the NE end of [[Buckeye Table]]. It is located in the [[Ohio Range]] of [[Westarctica]].


==Discovery and name==
==Discovery and name==

Latest revision as of 17:53, 27 March 2021

New Zealand explorers at summit of Mount Glossopteris looking toward the Canterbury Spur

Mount Glossopteris (84°44′S 113°43′W) is a mainly ice-covered mountain 2,865 meters (9,400 ft) high which may be identified by the exposed horizontal bedding on the north face, located at the NE end of Buckeye Table. It is located in the Ohio Range of Westarctica.

Discovery and name

The rather unusual name was proposed by USARP geologist William Long, a member of the Horlick Mountains Traverse party 1958-59, who, with Charles Bentley, Frederic Darling and Jack Long, climbed to the summit in December 1958.

Glossopteris is a prehistoric fernlike plant whose imprint was found on rocks of this mountain.