Difference between revisions of "Brush Glacier"

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(Created page with "'''Brush Glacier''' (74°29′S 111°36′W) is a broad glacier in the northwest part of the Bear Peninsula, flowing west into Dotson Ice Shelf to the north of Jef...")
 
 
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'''Brush Glacier''' (74°29′S 111°36′W) is a broad [[glacier]] in the northwest part of the [[Bear Peninsula]], flowing west into [[Dotson Ice Shelf]] to the north of Jeffrey Head, in [[Westarctica]]. The head of the glacier is marked by rocky, wedge-shaped Rogers Spur. Webster Pass divides Brush Glacier from Holt Glacier.
'''Brush Glacier''' (74°29′S 111°36′W) is a broad [[glacier]] in the northwest part of the [[Bear Peninsula]], flowing west into [[Dotson Ice Shelf]] to the north of Jeffrey Head, in [[Westarctica]]. The head of the glacier is marked by rocky, wedge-shaped Rogers Spur. [[Webster Pass]] divides Brush Glacier from Holt Glacier.


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

Latest revision as of 01:48, 12 March 2022

Brush Glacier (74°29′S 111°36′W) is a broad glacier in the northwest part of the Bear Peninsula, flowing west into Dotson Ice Shelf to the north of Jeffrey Head, in Westarctica. The head of the glacier is marked by rocky, wedge-shaped Rogers Spur. Webster Pass divides Brush Glacier from Holt Glacier.

Discovery and name

The glacier was first mapped by the United States Geological Survey from air photos taken by U.S. Navy Operation Highjump in January 1947. Brush Glacier was named for station engineer Bernard E. Brush.