Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T15:35:30.488Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Logistic aspects of geological studies in the Ellsworth Mountains, Antarctica, 1979–80

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2009

Extract

The most ambitious field project of the 1979–80 austral summer season in Antarctica was conducted in the Ellsworth Mountains (Fig 1), when 42 scientists and technicians studied a variety of geological problems in an area which included both the Sentinel Range to the north and the Heritage Range to the south (Fig 2), from about 77°15'S to 80°30'S and 80°W to 87°30'W.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1982

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Boyles, J. M. and others. 1979. Snowmobiles in Antarctica. Arctic, Vol 32, No 3, p 189200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clinch, N. B. 1967. First conquest of Antarctica's highest peaks. National Geographic Magazine, Vol 131, No 6, p 836–63.Google Scholar
Craddock, C. 1969. Geology of the Ellsworth Mountains. American Geographical Society. Antarctic Map Folio Series, Folio 12 Sheet 4.Google Scholar
Doumani, G. A. 1966. Effects of developments in transportation techniques on geological research in Antarctica. Antarctic Journal of the United States, Vol 1, No 6, p 255–64.Google Scholar
Frakes, L. A. and others. 1971. Late Paleozoic glaciation: part 3, Antarctica. Geological Society of America. Bulletin, Vol 82, No 6, p 1581–603.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hielle, A. and others. 1978. Stratigraphy and igneous petrology of the southern Heritage Range, Ellsworth Mountains, Antarctica. Norsk Polarinstitutt. Skrifter, No 169, p 543.Google Scholar
Hielle, A. and others (in press). Geology and petrology of the southern Heritage Range, Ellsworth Mountains. In: Craddock, C. ed. Antarctic geosdence. Madison, University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Matthews, J. L. and others. 1967. Late Paleozoic glacial rocks in the Sentinel and Queen Alexandra ranges. Antarctic Journal of the United States, Vol 2, No 4, p 108.Google Scholar
Orr, T. L. 1969. Army helicopter operations in Antarctica: eight years of support. Antarctic Journal of the United States, Vol 4, No 6, p 288–93.Google Scholar
Rutford, R. H. 1966. Field party transportation in Antarctica. Geotimes, Vol 11, No 4, p 3032.Google Scholar
Rutford, R. H. and Smith, P. M. 1966. The use of turbine helicopters in United States Antarctic ooerations, 1961–66. Polar Record, Vol 13, No 84, p 299303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schopf, J. M. 1967. Antarctic fossil plant collecting during the 1966–1967 season. Antarctic Journal of the United States, Vol 2, No 4, p 114–16.Google Scholar
Silversteen, S. C. 1967. The American Antarctic Mountaineering Expedition. Antarctic Journal of the United States, Vol 2, No 2, p 4850.Google Scholar
Soholt, D. E. and Craddock, C. 1964. Motor toboggan sled trains in Antarctica. Arctic, Vol 17, No 2, p 99104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Splettstoesser, J. F. and Webers, G. F. 1980. Geological investigations and logistics in the Ellsworth Mountains, 1979–80. Antarctic Journal of the United States, Vol 15, No 5, p 3639.Google Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1962. Motor sledges in the Antarctic. Polar Record, Vol 11, No 72, p 265–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swithinbank, C. 1977. Glaciological research in the Antarctic Peninsula. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London, B, Vol 279, p 161–83.Google Scholar
Tasch, P. 1967. Antarctic fossil conchostracans and the continental drift theory. Antarctic Journal of the United States, Vol 2, No 4, p 112–13.Google Scholar