The Clark Mountains are north of the head of the Boyd Glacier, northeast of the Mackay Mountains and east of the Allegheny Mountains.
Features include, from west to east, Mount Atwood, Mount Jones, Mount Burnham, Mount Van Valkenburg, Mount Maglione, Mount Ekblaw and the Kelly Nunataks.[2]
77°16′S142°17′W / 77.267°S 142.283°W / -77.267; -142.283.
A mountain, 1,180 metres (3,870 ft) high, at the west edge of the Clark Mountains.
Discovered by the USAS in 1940 on aerial flights from the West Base.
Named by the USAS for the late president emeritus W.W. Atwood, Sr., of Clark University, noted geologist and geographer, and his son, W.W. Atwood, Jr., who collaborated with his father in glaciological studies.[3]
Mount Jones
77°14′S142°11′W / 77.233°S 142.183°W / -77.233; -142.183.
The northernmost summit of the Clark Mountains.
Discovered on aerial flights from West Base of the USAS in 1940.
Named for Clarence F. Jones, Professor of Geography at Clark University.[4]
Mount Burnham
77°16′S142°05′W / 77.267°S 142.083°W / -77.267; -142.083.
A mountain, 1,170 metres (3,840 ft) high, standing 2 nautical miles (3.7 km; 2.3 mi) north of Mount Van Valkenburg.
Discovered on aerial flights from West Base of the USAS in 1940 and named for Guy Burnham, Cartographer in the School of Geography of Clark University.[5]
Mount Van Valkenburg
77°19′S142°06′W / 77.317°S 142.100°W / -77.317; -142.100.
A mountain, 1,165 metres (3,822 ft) high, standing 1 nautical mile (1.9 km; 1.2 mi) south of Mount Burnham.
Discovered on aerial flights from West Base of the USAS (1939–41).
Named for Professor. Samuel Van Valkenburg, Director of the School of Geography at Clark University.[6]
77°19′S141°48′W / 77.317°S 141.800°W / -77.317; -141.800.
A mountain, 1,235 metres (4,052 ft) high, standing 3 nautical miles (5.6 km; 3.5 mi) east of Mount Van Valkenburg in the east part of the Clark Mountains.
Discovered on aerial flights from the West Base of the USAS in 1940.
Named for W.E. Ekblaw, professor of geography at Clark University and a member of the Crocker Land Expedition in the Arctic (1913-17).[8]