74°36′S163°59′E / 74.600°S 163.983°E / -74.600; 163.983.
An ice-covered pass, 10 nautical miles (19 km; 12 mi) long, lying between the main mass of Deep Freeze Range and the Northern Foothills.
The pass facilitates movement between the lower ends of Priestley and Campbell Glaciers.
The feature was first mapped as a part of Campbell Glacier by the Northern Party of the BrAE, 1910-13.
It was remapped by the Southern Party of NZGSAE, 1962-63, and named for Frank V. Browning, a member of the BrAE Northern Party, for whom nearby Mount Browning is also named.[4]
Boomerang Glacier
74°33′S163°54′E / 74.550°S 163.900°E / -74.550; 163.900.
A gently curving glacier, 10 nautical miles (19 km; 12 mi) long, draining southward from Mount Dickason in the Deep Freeze Range to enter Browning Pass, at the north side of Nansen Ice Sheet.
Discovered by the Northern Party of the BrAE, 1910-13, and so named by them because of its shape.[5]
74°42′S163°03′E / 74.700°S 163.050°E / -74.700; 163.050.
A prominent headland forming the extremity of McCarthy Ridge on the southeast side of Eisenhower Range, overlooking the Nansen Ice Sheet.
Mapped by USGS from surveys and United States Navy air photos, 1955-63.
Named by US-ACAN for Captain James C. Rhodes, USMCR, an LC-130 aircraft commander with United States Navy Squadron VX-6 for several seasons to 1967.[7]
McCarthy Ridge
74°37′S163°03′E / 74.617°S 163.050°E / -74.617; 163.050.
A broad, mainly ice-covered ridge with steep sides forming the east wall of Carnein Glacier, in the foothills of southeast Eisenhower Range.
Mapped by USGS from surveys and United States Navy air photos, 1955-63.
Named by US-ACAN for Peter C. McCarthy, biolab manager at McMurdo Station, winter party 1966.[8]
Carnein Glacier
74°41′S162°54′E / 74.683°S 162.900°E / -74.683; 162.900.
A glacier draining the southeast corner of the Eisenhower Range, flowing south along the west side of McCarthy Ridge to merge with lower Reeves Glacier at the Nansen Ice Sheet.
Mapped by USGS from surveys and USN air photos, 1955-63.
Named by US-ACAN for Carl R. Carnein, glaciologist at McMurdo Station, summer 1965-66.[9]
74°55′S162°28′E / 74.917°S 162.467°E / -74.917; 162.467.
A bare rock nunatak lying at the south side of the terminus of Reeves Glacier, 4 nautical miles (7.4 km; 4.6 mi) north of the summit of Mount Gerlache.
Mapped by USGS from surveys and United States Navy air photos, 1955-63.
Named by US-ACAN for James J. Olson, geophysicist with the USARP Ross Ice Shelf party in the 1961-62 season.[11]