Macey Cone

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Macey Cone ( 52°59′S73°15′E / 52.983°S 73.250°E / -52.983; 73.250 ) is a small hill, 125 metres (410 ft) high, which marks the remnants of an extinct volcanic cone surmounting the lava cliffs at the northwest end of Laurens Peninsula, about 0.6 nautical miles (1.1 km) northeast of Cape Laurens at the northwest end of Heard Island. The feature was surveyed in 1948 by the Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions, who named it for L.E. Macey, a senior radio operator with the expedition. [1]

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Mount Macey is an isolated peak 1,960 metres (6,430 ft) high, about 15 nautical miles (28 km) southeast of the Stinear Nunataks in Mac. Robertson Land, Antarctica. It was sighted in 1954 by an Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions party led by R.G. Dovers, and named for L.E. Macey, technical superintendent at Mawson Station in 1954.

Cape Laurens is a cape which marks the northwestern extremity of Laurens Peninsula and Heard Island. The name was probably applied by Captain Franklin F. Smith, of the American bark Laurens, who visited Heard Island in 1855–56 and who, with Captain Erasmus Darwin Rogers, initiated sealing operations and longtime American sealer occupation of Heard Island. The name appears on a chart by the British expedition under George Nares, which visited the island in HMS Challenger in 1874 and utilized the names then in use by the sealers.

References

  1. "Macey Cone". Geographic Names Information System . United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior . Retrieved 2013-07-15.

PD-icon.svg This article incorporates public domain material from "Macey Cone". Geographic Names Information System . United States Geological Survey.