Civilisation/World Geography - Oceania and Antarctica

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Opinions of what constitutes Oceania range from its three subregions of Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia to, more broadly, the entire insular region between Asia and the Americas, including Australasia and the Malay Archipelago. The term is often used more specifically to denote a continent comprising Australia and proximate islands


Melanesia consists of the four countries of: Vanuatu, Solomon Islands, Fiji, and Papua New Guinea


Micronesia region encompasses the country Micronesia, the four other sovereign, independent nations – Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, and Palau – as well as three U.S. territories – Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, and Wake Island


Polynesia made up of over 1,000 islands scattered over the central and southern Pacific Ocean. Includes Samoa, Tonga, and Tuvalu


Highest mountains in Oceania – Carstensz Pyramid (Puncak Jaya), Julianatop (Puncak Mandala), Puncak Trikora. All in the Indonesian part of New Guinea

Arafura Sea lies west of the Pacific Ocean overlying the continental shelf between Australia and New Guinea

Torres Strait lies between Australia and New Guinea. It is named after navigator Luis Vaz de Torres who passed through the Strait in 1606


Australia

Australia is the world's sixth largest country by total area

Australia has six states – New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, Western Australia, and Tasmania; and two major mainland territories – Northern Territory, and the Australian Capital Territory (ACT)

Largest cities – Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide

The federal parliament directly administers the following territories:

·       Ashmore and Cartier Islands

·       Australian Antarctic Territory

·       Christmas Island, located 1,600 miles northwest of Perth

·       Cocos (Keeling) Islands, located in the Indian Ocean, half way between Australia and Sri Lanka

·       Coral Sea Islands

·       Heard Island and McDonald Islands

·       Jervis Bay Territory, a naval base and sea port for the national capital in land that was formerly part of New South Wales


Norfolk Island is in the Pacific Ocean, located between Australia, New Zealand and New Caledonia. The island is part of the Commonwealth of Australia, and enjoys a large degree of self-governance


Lord Howe Island is a small island in the Pacific Ocean 600 km east of the Australian mainland administered by New South Wales

Macquarie Island lies in the southwest Pacific Ocean, half way between New Zealand and Antarctica. It is administered by Tasmania


New South Wales

Capital – Sydney

New South Wales was named by James Cook

Stingray Harbour was renamed to Botany Bay, after botanist Joseph Banks

Kingsford Smith airport serves Sydney

Sydney Harbour Bridge was designed by John Bradfield. It spans Port Jackson, and the road across the bridge is known as the Bradfield Highway. Built by Dorman Long and Co Ltd, Middlesbrough and opened in 1932

Ove Arup were the structural engineers on Sydney Opera House, designed by Jorn Utzon

Parramatta River is an arm of Sydney harbour

Wagga Wagga straddles the Murrumbidgee River

Lightning Ridge is a world centre of the mining of black opals

Liverpool Plains are an extensive agricultural area covering approximately 1.2 million hectares of the northwestern slopes of New South Wales

Mount Kosciusko is in the Snowy Mountains, and is the highest mountain in Australia. Named in honour of a Polish national hero

Mount Townsend is the second highest mountain in Australia

Wentworth lies at the confluence of Australia's two most important rivers, the Darling and the Murray

Wollongong is a seaside city located in the Illawarra region of New South Wales


Queensland

Capital – Brisbane

Brisbane is on the River Brisbane

Brisbane is named after Major-General Sir Thomas Brisbane, who was Governor of New South Wales from 1821 to 1825

Brisbane is known as the “world’s largest country town”

Q1 (abbreviation of Queensland Number One) is a skyscraper in Surfers Paradise, on the Gold Coast. Q1 is the tallest building in Australia and the Southern Hemisphere

Cape York Peninsula is a large remote peninsula located in Far North Queensland

Cape Melville is a headland on the eastern coast of the Cape York Peninsula. The fauna and flora found near Cape Melville is diverse and includes several endemic species

Queensland has the world’s oldest rainforests

Cairns is located on the east coast of Cape York Peninsula on a coastal strip between the Coral Sea and the Great Dividing Range

Kuranda Scenic Railway runs from Cairns into the tropical rainforest

Whitsunday Islands are a collection of continental islands of various sizes off the central coast of Queensland

Fraser Island is the largest sand island in the world

Raine Island harbours the world's largest remaining population of Green Turtles

Heron Island is a coral cay located near the Tropic of Capricorn in the southern Great Barrier Reef

Possession Island is a small island in the Torres Strait Islands group off the coast of far northern Queensland. Named by James Cook in 1770

Thursday Island is the administrative and commercial centre of the Torres Strait Island Region


South Australia

Capital – Adelaide

Adelaide is named in honour of Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, queen consort to King William IV

Kangaroo Island lies southwest of Adelaide at the entrance of Gulf Saint Vincent. Named by Matthew Flinders in 1802

Remarkable Rocks are in Flinders Chase National Park on Kangaroo Island

Coober Pedy is sometimes referred to as the “opal capital of the world”. Coober Pedy is renowned for its below-ground residences, called ‘dugouts’, which are built due to the scorching daytime heat

Port Lincoln is reputed to have the most millionaires per capita in Australia. The economy is based on the huge grain handling facilities and tuna farming for the Japanese market

Flinders Ranges is the largest mountain range in South Australia

Lake Eyre is, on the rare occasions that it fills, the largest lake in Australia and is the lowest point in Australia, at approximately 15 m below sea level. It is the focal point of the vast Lake Eyre Basin. Lake Eyre was named in honour of Edward John Eyre, who was the first European to see it, in 1840. Eyre was a controversial Governor of Jamaica

Marree Man is the world’s largest geoglyph, near Lake Eyre

Woomera is the Australian Defence Force facility supporting the RAAF Woomera Test Range, the western world's largest defence systems test and evaluation range


Victoria

Capital – Melbourne

Tullamarine airport serves Melbourne

Melbourne is located on the large natural bay known as Port Phillip, with the city centre positioned at the estuary of the Yarra River

Melbourne is named after the Prime Minister Lord Melbourne

Melbourne was capital of Australia until 1927

Ballarat and Geelong are towns in Victoria

Southernmost point in mainland of Australia is South Point, in Victoria

Victoria is the smallest state in mainland Australia

The Twelve Apostles is a collection of limestone stacks off the shore of the Port Campbell National Park, by the Great Ocean Road in Victoria

Phillip Island is known as Penguin Island. Home of the Penguin Parade (little penguins coming ashore at dusk). 140 km south of Melbourne

Great Ocean Road (known as the Surfcoast Highway) stretches along the southeastern coast of Australia between the Victorian cities of Torquay and Warrnambool. After Apollo Bay the road passes through the Great Otway National Park, which includes some of the last surviving rain forests in the south of Australia


Western Australia

Capital – Perth

Australian gold rush started at Kalgoorlie, Western Australia in 1852

The Super Pit at Kalgoorlie is an open-cut gold mine approximately 3.6 km long, 1.6 km wide and 512 metres deep. It was created by Alan Bond

Wave Rock is a natural rock formation located east of the town of Hyden in Western Australia. It derives its name from the fact that it is shaped like a large, smooth wave

Rudall River National Park and Karijini National Park are in Western Australia

Bibbulmun Track is a long distance walk trail in Western Australia. It runs from Perth to Albany and is almost 1000 km long

Kimberley in the northern part of Western Australia. The region was named after John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley. One third of the world's annual production of diamonds is mined at the Argyle and the Ellendale diamond mines

The Pinnacles are limestone formations contained within Nambung National Park


Tasmania

Capital – Hobart

Tasmania is known is “the apple isle”

Hobart is on the estuary of the Derwent River

Hobart is named after Robert Hobart, 4th Earl of Buckinghamshire

Launceston is the second largest city in Tasmania after Hobart


Northern Territory

Capital – Darwin

Alice Springs was named after the wife of the former Postmaster General of South Australia, Sir Charles Todd

Devils Marbles are granite boulders in Northern Territory

Kakadu National Park is 171 km southeast of Darwin. The Ranger Uranium Mine, one of the most productive uranium mines in the world, is contained within the park

Bathurst Island is one of the Tiwi Islands in the Northern Territory off the northern coast of Australia along with Melville Island

Melville Island lies in the eastern Timor Sea, off the coast of the Northern Territory. It is the second biggest island in Australia, after Tasmania

Mount Conner is a flat-topped and horseshoe-shaped inselberg

Uluru, also known as Ayers Rock, is a large sandstone rock formation

Kata Tjuta, and also known as Mount Olga (or The Olgas), are a group of large domed rock formations 25 km from Uluru

Anangu are the traditional Aboriginal owners of Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park


Australian Capital Territory

Capital – Canberra

The territory was transferred to the Commonwealth by the state of New South Wales in 1911, two years prior to the naming of Canberra as the national capital in 1913

The Lodge is the residence of the prime minister, in Canberra

Lake Burley Griffin is an artificial lake in Canberra. It is named after Walter Burley Griffin, the American architect who won the competition to design the city of Canberra


Deserts

Great Victoria Desert is the largest desert in Australia, in Western Australia and South Australia

Great Sandy Desert is in Western Australia. It is the second largest desert in Australia

Gibson Desert is a Western Australian desert made up of sandhills and dry grass

Tanami Desert is in Northern Territory. It has a rocky terrain with small hills. It is one of the most isolated and arid places on Earth

Simpson Desert is a large area of dry, red sandy plain and dunes in Northern Territory, South Australia and Queensland in central Australia. It is the world’s largest sand dune desert


Rivers

Longest rivers in Australia – Murray, Murrumbidgee, Darling, Lachlan, Warrego

Murray-Darling Basin drains around one-seventh of the Australian land mass

Murray River makes up much of the border between the Australian states of Victoria and New South Wales

Murrumbidgee flows through New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory


Great Barrier Reef is the world's largest coral reef system composed of over 2,900 individual reefs and 900 islands stretching for over 2,300 km. The reef is located in the Coral Sea, off the coast of Queensland. The Great Barrier Reef can be seen from outer space and is the world's biggest single structure made by living organisms

Bass Strait separates Tasmania from the Australian mainland, specifically the state of Victoria. Named by Matthew Flinders (after George Bass)

Flinders Island lies in the Bass Strait

Great Australian Bight is a large bight, or open bay, off the central and western portions of the southern coastline of mainland Australia. It was once joined to Antarctica

Cape Howe is a coastal headland in Australia, forming the border of New South Wales and Victoria. The point was named by Captain Cook when he passed it in 1770, honouring Richard Howe, 1st Earl Howe who was Treasurer of the Navy at that time

Nullarbor Plain is a vast area of flat, almost treeless, arid or semi-arid country immediately north of the Great Australian Bight. It is the world's largest single piece of limestone, and occupies an area of about 200,000 km². Nullarbor means “no tree”

Great Artesian Basin provides the only reliable source of freshwater through much of inland Australia

Indian Pacific is a weekly passenger rail service running between Sydney and Perth. The route includes the world's longest straight stretch of railway track, a 478 kilometre stretch over the Nullarbor Plain

First railway line linking North and South Australia opened in 2004, between Adelaide and Darwin. The passenger train known as 'The Ghan' operates on the railway


Fiji

Fiji is an archipelago of more than 332 islands, of which 110 are permanently inhabited

Fiji has two major islands, Viti Levu and Vanua Levu

The capital and largest city, Suva, is on Viti Levu

The majority of Fiji's islands were formed through volcanic activity starting around 150 million years ago


Kiribati

The Gilbert Islands became independent from the UK as Kiribati in 1979

Line Islands is a chain of eleven atolls and low coral islands in the central Pacific Ocean. Eight of the islands form part of Kiribati, while the remaining three are United States territories. Those that are part of Kiribati are in the world's farthest forward time zone, UTC+14:00

The capital and now most populated area, South Tarawa, consists of a number of islets, connected by a series of causeways. These comprise about half the area of Tarawa Atoll

Banaba is a raised coral island in Kiribati


Marshall Islands

Marshall Islands are named after Captain John Marshall from Ramsgate, who visited the islands in 1788

Marshall Islands is part of the larger island group of Micronesia

The most populous atoll is Majuro, which also acts as the capital

The largest nuclear test the U.S. ever conducted, code named “Castle Bravo”, took place at Bikini Atoll

With the 1952 test of the first U.S. hydrogen bomb, code named "Ivy Mike", the island of Elugelab in the Enewetak atoll was destroyed


Federated States of Micronesia

Federated States of Micronesia is an independent sovereign island nation and a United States associated state consisting of four states – from west to east, Yap, Chuuk, Pohnpei and Kosrae – that are spread across the Western Pacific Ocean

The capital is Palikir, located on Pohnpei Island, while the largest city is Weno, located in the Chuuk Atoll

Federated States of Micronesia is spread across part of the Caroline Islands in the wider region of Micronesia


Nauru

Nauru is an island country in Micronesia. Its nearest neighbour is Banaba Island in Kiribati

Nauru was formerly known as Pleasant Island

Nauru is a phosphate rock island with rich deposits near the surface, which allow easy strip mining operations. It has some phosphate resources which are not now economically viable for extraction. The phosphate reserves on Nauru are now almost entirely depleted

Yaren district is the de facto capital of Nauru


New Zealand

The two main islands of New Zealand (the North Island, or Te Ika-a-Māui, and the South Island, or Te Waipounamu) are separated by the Cook Strait

South Island is the larger island

North Island is the more populous

Stewart Island / Rakiura is the third largest island of New Zealand. It lies 30 km south of the South Island, across Foveaux Strait. Its permanent population is slightly over 400 people, most of whom live in the settlement of Oban

Aotearoa is the Maori name for New Zealand. Means “the land of the long white cloud”

Auckland is the largest city in New Zealand

Sky Tower is an observation and telecommunications tower located in Auckland. It is 328 m tall, as measured from ground level to the top of the mast, making it the tallest man-made structure in the Southern Hemisphere

Wellington is the capital city and second most populous urban area. It is located at the southwestern tip of the North Island

Beehive is the common name for the Executive Wing of the New Zealand Parliament Buildings in Wellington

Christchurch is the largest city in the South Island of New Zealand, and the country's third-most populous urban area

River Avon flows through Christchurch

Rotorua is a city on the southern shores of the lake of the same name, in the Bay of Plenty Region of North Island. It is known for its geothermal activity, and features geysers – notably the Pohutu Geyser. Known as “Sulphur City”

Napier was rebuilt in Art Deco style after an earthquake in 1931

Bay of Islands is on North Island. Home of the first Maori settlers, and site of the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi

Aoraki/Mount Cook is the highest mountain in New Zealand. It lies in the Southern Alps, the mountain range which runs the length of the South Island. Aoraki means “cloud piercer”

Lake Taupo is the largest lake by surface area in New Zealand

Lake Hauroko is located in a mountain valley in Fiordland National Park in the South Island. The long S-shaped lake is 463 m deep. It is New Zealand's deepest lake

Cape Farewell is the most northerly point on the South Island

Firth of Thames is a large bay located in the north of the North Island

Waikato River is the longest river in New Zealand

Tasman Glacier is the longest glacier in New Zealand. It lies entirely within the borders of Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park

Fox Glacier and Franz Josef Glacier are on the west coast of New Zealand

Milford Sound is a fiord in the south west of South Island, within Fiordland National Park. Milford Sound sports two permanent waterfalls all year round, Lady Bowen Falls and Stirling Falls

Doubtful Sound is a fiord in Fiordland


States in free association with New Zealand –


Cook Islands, comprises 15 islands. The Cook Islands' defence and foreign affairs are the responsibility of New Zealand. Main population centres are on the island of Rarotonga. Avarua is the capital

Niue, the largest coral island in the world. Known as the “Rock of Polynesia”. Though self-governing, Niue lacks full sovereignty. In 2003, Niue became the world's first ‘WiFi nation’, in which free wireless Internet access is provided throughout the country. Alofi is the capital


Antipodes Islands

Subantarctic volcanic islands that are territorially part of New Zealand


Campbell Islands

A group of subantarctic islands, belong to New Zealand


Chatham Islands

Have officially belonged to New Zealand since 1842. They cover a total of 966 km², most of which is in the two main islands, Chatham Island and Pitt Island. Chatham Island is the fourth largest island of New Zealand. Chatham Islands observe their own time, 45 minutes ahead of New Zealand time


Tokelau

A territory of New Zealand in the South Pacific Ocean that consists of three tropical coral atolls


Palau

Palau is part of the larger island group of Micronesia, and is spread across the Caroline Islands

The most populous island is Koror. The capital Ngerulmud is located in Melekeok State on the nearby island of Babeldaob

Palau became an independent country in 1994

Jellyfish Lake in Palau is notable for the millions of golden jellyfish which migrate horizontally across the lake daily


Papua New Guinea

The eastern part of New Guinea forms the mainland of Papua New Guinea, which has been an independent country since 1975. It was formerly a territory governed by Australia

Port Moresby is the capital and largest city

Owen Stanley Range is a mountain range in Papua New Guinea

Bismarck Range is a mountain range in the central highlands of Papua New Guinea; the highest point is Mount Wilhelm

Carteret Islands are Papua New Guinea islands located near Bougainville in the South Pacific. The atoll is a scattering of low lying islands in a horseshoe shape. The islands have progressively become uninhabitable, due to flooding

New Britain is the largest island in the Bismarck Archipelago (named after Otto von Bismarck) of Papua New Guinea. The island was part of German New Guinea

848 languages are listed for the country


Samoa

Samoa became independent from New Zealand in 1962

Western Samoa changed its name to Samoa in 1998

The two main islands of Samoa are Upolu and Savai'i. The capital city, Apia, is situated on the island of Upolu. The islands are seperated by the Apolima Strait

Samoa changed to driving on the left hand side of the road in 2009

The International Date Line was moved to the east of the country in 2011


Solomon Islands

Solomon Islands lie to the east of Papua New Guinea and northwest of Vanuatu

Guadalcanal is the largest of Solomon Islands. It hosts the nation's capital, Honiara

Solomon Islands should not be confused with the Solomon Islands archipelago, which is a collection of Melanesian islands that includes Solomon Islands and Bougainville Island (part of Papua New Guinea), but excludes the nation's outlying islands

Named after the biblical king Solomon

Queen Elizabeth II is the Monarch of the Solomon Islands and the head of state; she is represented by the Governor-General


Tonga

Tonga became known as the Friendly Islands because of the friendly reception accorded to Captain James Cook on his first visit there in 1773

Tonga is the only Polynesian kingdom. It has never lost its sovereignty to a foreign power

The largest island, Tongatapu, on which the capital city of Nukuʻalofa is located, covers 257 km2

Free Wesleyan Church is the largest Methodist denomination in Tonga


Tuvalu

The Ellice Islands became independent from the UK as Tuvalu in 1978

Tuvalu consists of three reef islands and six true atolls

Funafuti is an atoll on which the capital of Tuvalu is located

The capital of Tuvalu is sometimes given as Fongafale or Vaiaku, but the entire atoll of Funafuti is officially the capital

The ".tv" domain name generates around $2.2 million each year from royalties, which is about ten per cent of the government's total revenue


Vanuatu

In the 1880s, France and the United Kingdom claimed parts of the archipelago, and in 1906 they agreed on a framework for jointly managing the archipelago as the New Hebrides through a British–French Condominium. An independence movement arose in the 1970s, and the Republic of Vanuatu was founded in 1980

Port Vila is the capital and largest city of Vanuatu and is located on the island of Efate

Tanna is an island of Vanuatu, and is at the centre of the Jon Frum cargo cult which worships Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh

Mount Yasur is an active volcano on Tanna

Ambrym is a volcanic island inVanuatu. Volcanic activity on the island includes lava lakes in two craters near the summit


Other territories –


American Samoa

American Samoa is an unincorporated territory of the United States

The largest and most populous island is Tutuila

Pago Pago is the capital, Fagatogo is the seat of government


Bougainville

Louis-Antoine de Bougainville's name is given to Bougainville which is geographically part of the Solomon Islands, but politically Papua New Guinea; and to the strait which divides it from the island of Choiseul


Caroline Islands

Caroline Islands are a widely scattered archipelago of tiny islands to the north of New Guinea. Politically they are divided between the Federated States of Micronesia and Palau. Historically, this area was also called New Philippines


Easter Island

Easter Island was given its common name of ‘Easter’ because the first recorded European visit by a Dutch Admiral Jacob Roggeveen was on Easter Sunday, 1722. The island's official Spanish name Isla de Pasqua is a direct translation of ‘Easter Island’. The current Polynesian name of the island, Rapa Nui or ‘Big Rapa’, was coined by labour immigrants from Rapa in the Bass Islands

Easter Island is a special territory of Chile that was annexed in 1888

Hanga Roa is the main town, capital and harbour of Easter Island

Moai are 887 monolithic human figures carved by the Rapa Nui people on Easter Island between the years 1250 and 1500. The more recent moai had hats of red volcanic stone known as pukao on their heads, which represent the topknot of the chieftains


French Polynesia

French Polynesia is made up of six groups of islands. The largest and most populated island is Tahiti, in the Society Islands. The other island groups are: Marquesas Islands, Tuamotu Archipelago, Gambier Islands, Austral Islands and Bass Islands

Papeete, on Tahiti, is the capital of French Polynesia

Bora Bora is in the Society Islands

Society Islands are divided into Leeward Islands and Windward Islands

Moruroa is an atoll which forms part of the Tuamotu Archipelago in French Polynesia. France undertook nuclear weapon tests between 1966 and 1996 at Moruroa

Marquesas Islands are a group of volcanic islands in French Polynesia, an overseas collectivity of France


Mariana Islands

Mariana Islands are an arc-shaped archipelago made up by the summits of fifteen volcanic mountains in the Pacific Ocean. They are composed of two administrative units, Guam, a US territory, and the Northern Mariana Islands (including the islands of Saipan, Tinian and Rota) which make up a Commonwealth of the United States

Guam was discovered by Magellan, and was formerly a Spanish territory

Guam is the largest and southernmost of the Mariana Islands


Pitcairn Islands

Pitcairn Islands are a group of four volcanic islands in the southern Pacific Ocean that form the last British Overseas Territory in the Pacific. The four islands are Pitcairn, Henderson, Ducie, and Oeno

Adamstown is the only settlement on, and as such, the capital of, the Pitcairn Islands

Adamstown has a population of 56, which is the entire population of the Pitcairn Islands: all the other islands in the group are uninhabited

Henderson Island is the largest of the Pitcairn Islands


Wake Island

Wake Island is an unorganized, unincorporated territory of the United States in Micronesia

Access to the island is restricted, and all activities on the island are managed by the United States Air Force. There is also a missile launch facility operated by the U.S. Missile Defense Agency


Wallis and Futuna

Wallis and Futuna islands lie between Fiji and Samoa and are a French overseas collectivity

The territory is made up of three main volcanic tropical islands

Mata-Utu is the capital and largest city


New Caledonia

New Caledonia is a special collectivity of France located in the southwest Pacific Ocean. The archipelago, part of the Melanesia subregion, includes the main island of Grande Terre. The capital of the territory is Noumea


Antarctica

Antarctica is considered a desert, with annual precipitation of only 200 mm along the coast and far less inland

Antarctica is nearly twice the size of Australia. About 98% of Antarctica is covered by ice that averages 1.9 km in thickness, which extends to all but the northernmost reaches of the Antarctic Peninsula. The large volume of ice present stores around 70% of the world's fresh water

British Antarctic Territory is a British overseas territory, the sector of Antarctica claimed by the United Kingdom from the South Pole to 60° south latitude between longitudes 20° west and 80° west. Before 1962, the area now covered by the Territory comprised three separate dependencies of the Falkland Islands; Graham Land, the South Orkney Islands, and the South Shetland Islands

Ross Dependency is a region of Antarctica defined by a sector originating at the South Pole, passing along longitudes 160° east to 150° west, and terminating at latitude 60° south. It is claimed by New Zealand

Adelie Land is a region of Antarctica claimed by France

Graham Land and Palmer Land are the northern and southern portions of the Antarctic Peninsula

Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station was built by the United States Government during 1956 as a part of its commitment to the scientific goals of the International Geophysical Year

Kaiser Wilhelm II Land (also Wilhelm II Coast) is part of Antarctica

Scott's Hut is a building located on the north shore of Cape Evans on Ross Island in Antarctica. It was erected in 1911 by the British Antarctic Expedition of 1910–1913 (also known as the Terra Nova Expedition) led by Robert Falcon Scott


Mountains

The three largest mountain ranges on the Antarctic continent are the Transantarctic Mountains, the West Antarctica Ranges, and the East Antarctica Ranges

Highest mountains in Antarctica – Vinson Massif, Mount Tyree, Mount Shinn

Vinson Massif is the highest mountain of Antarctica, lying in the Sentinel Range of the Ellsworth Mountains, which stand above the Ronne Ice Shelf near the base of the Antarctic Peninsula

Mount Erebus in Antarctica is the southernmost active volcano on Earth. With a summit elevation of 3795 m, it is located on Ross Island. Mount Erebus was first climbed (to the rim) by members of Sir Ernest Shackleton's party in 1908. Mount Erebus was discovered in1841 by polar explorer James Clark Ross who named it Mount Erebus after his ships, Erebus and Terror. Erebus was a primordial Greek god of darkness, the son of Chaos


Lakes

Lake Vostok is the largest of more than 140 subglacial lakes found under the surface of Antarctica. It is located beneath Russia's Vostok Station, 4,000 m under the surface of the central Antarctic ice sheet

Lake Ellsworth is a subglacial lake located in West Antarctica under approximately 3.4 km of ice

Lake Vida is a hypersaline lake on the continent of Antarctica. It came to public attention in 2002 when microbes frozen in its ice cover for more than 2,800 years were successfully thawed and reanimated


Glaciers

Lambert Glacier is in East Antarctica. At about 60 miles wide, over 250 miles long, and about 2,500 meters deep, it is the world's largest glacier

Beardmore Glacier in Antarctica has a length exceeding 160 km. The glacier is one of the main passages from the Ross Ice Shelf through the Queen Alexandra and Commonwealth ranges of the Transantarctic Mountains to the Antarctic Plateau, and was one of the early routes to the South Pole. The glacier was discovered by Ernest Shackleton during his Nimrod Antarctic expedition of 1908


Seas

Weddell Sea is an area along the east side of the Antarctic Peninsula

Bellingshausen Sea is an area along the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula. It takes its name from Russian explorer Admiral Bellingshausen, who explored in the area in 1821

Amundsen Sea lies to the south of Bellingshausen Sea

Ross Sea is a deep bay of the Southern Ocean in Antarctica between Victoria Land and Marie Byrd Land

McMurdo Sound opens into the Ross Sea to the north

Wilkins Sound is largely occupied by the Wilkins Ice Shelf. In 2009 the thin bridge of ice to the Wilkins Ice Shelf off the coast of Antarctica splintered, and scientists expect it could cause the collapse of the Shelf