Boyd Glacier National Park

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Boyd Glacier National Park is a protected area of Westarctica created to preserve Boyd Glacier, the Billboard and the surrounding portion of the Sarnoff Mountains in the greater Ford Ranges. It was created on 10 June 2025 by a Westarctican Ordinance passed by the Senate of Westarctica which combined two separate protected areas into Westarctica's first National Park.

The edge of Boyd Glacier, along the Sulzburger Ice Shelf

It falls under the oversight of the Westarctican Parks Service.

History

The glacier was discovered on aerial flights of the Byrd Antarctic Expedition in 1934, and named for Vernon D. Boyd, an expedition machinist, and a member of West Base of the United States Antarctic Service.

Boyd Glacier was on the January 2024 list of ten sites that should be considered for eventual protection as a national park of Westarctica. The glacier was identified primarily for its size, striking scenery, stability and coastal location. These factors were deemed to make Boyd an ideal candidate for successful conservation balance against the increased visitation in ecotourism that eventual national park designation would require.

It was on the list of five recommended areas to protect made by Jordan Farmer to Grand Duke Travis in March of 2025. On 20 April 2025, Grand Duke Travis declared Boyd Glacier a conservation zone under the oversight of the Westarctican Parks Service. There are already legislative efforts to enshrine Boyd Glacier as a national park, by combining it with Billboard National Monument, which it borders.

The Sarnoff Mountains were named for David Sarnoff, president of RCA (Radio Corporation of America), who provided radio equipment for receiving and transmitting that was used in the field and at Little America by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition (1933–35).

The summit of the Billboard was first visited by Bruce Luyendyk and Kuno Lecha by helicopter in January 1993 during expedition GANOVEX VII. In 1998-99, Christine Siddoway led a geological party from Colorado College that reached the summit by climbing a west route.

The Sarnoff Mountains were on the January 2024 list of ten sites that should be considered for eventual protection as a national park of Westarctica. Further research and consideration resulted in the current borders being on the list of five recommended areas to protect made by Jordan Farmer to Grand Duke Travis in March of 2025. On 20 April 2025, Grand Duke Travis declared the Billboard and surrounding portions of the western Sarnoff Mountains a national monument under the oversight of the Westarctican Parks Service.

Conservans Protectorem

Those nobles whose titles were named for features within the memorial when it was established were afforded the additional honorific Conservans Protectorem to use in conjunction with said title.

  • Duke of the Walgreen Coast
  • Marquis of Sarnoff
  • Marquise of Walgreen

Conservation

 
An aerial view of the Billboard

Boyd Glacier National Park's roughly 453,700 acres (1,836 square kilometers) is protected under category I (national park) of the International Union for Conservation of Nature. These protections mean that conservation efforts are primarily aimed at minimizing the human impact of the glacial melt of the Boyd Glacier. Glacial formations are only a semi-permanent aspect of a landscape, while easily considered permanent within the scope of a human lifespan, they are fleeting on a geologic scale. Despite this, limiting the effects of climate change on these formations is crucial to the concern of rising sea levels and biosphere preservation.

Although not the primary concern, efforts are also made to protect biodiversity found within its boundaries.

Features

Boyd Glacier National Park protects the glacier itself, including its outlet into the waters of the Marshall Archipelago, the Swope Glacier, and the surrounding peninsula running from Mount Woodward to Mount Douglass. It also includes the northwestern portion of the Sarnoff Mountains, itself a part of the Ford Ranges between Arthur Glacier and Boyd Glacier.

Key locations

 
The boundaries of Boyd Glacier National Park (outlined in red and green)
  • Boyd Glacier (77°14′S 145°25′W) is a heavily crevassed glacier flowing west-northwest for about 45 nautical miles (83 km; 52 mi) to the Sulzberger Ice Shelf between Bailey Ridge and Mount Douglass in the Ford Ranges. Discovered on aerial flights of the ByrdAE in 1934, and named for Vernon D. Boyd, expedition machinist, and a member of West Base of the USAS (1939–41).
  • Mount Douglass (77°20′S 145°20′W) is an ice-covered mountain 8 nautical miles (15 km; 9.2 mi) east-southeast of Mount Woodward on the south side of Boyd Glacier. Discovered in 1934 on aerial flights of the ByrdAE. Named for Malcolm C. Douglass, dog driver at West Base of the USAS (1939–41).
  • Mount Kohler (77°17′S 145°35′W) is a mountain 480 metres (1,570 ft) high on the south side of Boyd Glacier, 4 nautical miles (7.4 km; 4.6 mi) east of Mount Woodward. Mapped by USAS (1939–41) led by R. Admiral R.E. Byrd. Named for Herbert V. Kohler, Jr., and Ruth DeYoung Kohler II, son and daughter of Herbert V. Kohler, financial contributors to the ByrdAE, 1933-35.
  • Swope Glacier (77°20′S 145°50′W) is a glacier which drains westward from the Ford Ranges, between Mount Woodward and Mount West, into Sulzberger Ice Shelf. Features in these ranges were discovered and successively mapped by the ByrdAE (1928-30) and (1933-35) and by the USAS (1939-41) all led by R. Admiral R.E. Byrd. The glacier is named for Gerard Swope, president of General Electric, who contributed various types of electrical equipment to the ByrdAE (1933-35).
  • Mount Woodward (77°18′S 145°47′W) is a mountain with broad twin summits standing between Hammond Glacier and Boyd Glacier, 6 nautical miles (11 km; 6.9 mi) west-northwest of Mount Douglass. Discovered by the ByrdAE (1928-30) and named for Donald Woodward, a patron of the expedition.