The name "Hughes Bay" has appeared on maps for over 100 years, and commemorates Edward Hughes, master of the Sprightly, a sealing vessel owned by the London whaling company Samuel Enderby & Sons, which explored in this area in 1824–25.[1]
Exploration
The first recorded landing on the Antarctic mainland was made in the area of this bay by Captain John Davis (see Davis Coast) from the shallop Cecilia (see Cecilia Island), tender to his ship Huron (see Huron Glacier) on 7 February 1821.
The bay was roughly charted by James Hoseason, First Mate in the British sealer Sprightly (see Sprightly Island) in December 1824 and was named Hughes' Bay after Captain Edward Hughes, the ship's master
The bay was further charted by the Belgian Antarctic Expedition (BeAE) during 23–25 January 1898.
Air photography of the area by the Falkland Islands and Dependencies Aerial Survey Expedition (FIDASE) in 1956-57 led to important changes in topography and outline of the bay, as shown on maps and charts.
Prior to this time many identifications of names in the area were no more than guesses.[3]
64°25′S61°10′W / 64.417°S 61.167°W / -64.417; -61.167.
A short, but wide, glacier lying east of Salvesen Cove.
Photographed by the FIDASE in 1956-57, and mapped from these photos by the FIDS.
Named by the UK-APC in 1960 for Louis Blériot (1872-1936), French aviator who in 1907 flew the first full-size powered monoplane and made the first flight across the English Channel in July 1909.[4]
64°09′S61°03′W / 64.150°S 61.050°W / -64.150; -61.050.
Group of small islands and rocks lying east of Midas Island and north of Apendice Island in Hughes Bay.
First charted in detail and given the descriptive name "Moos Inseln|(Moss Islands) by the SwedAE under Nordenskjold in 1902.[6]
64°20′S61°10′W / 64.333°S 61.167°W / -64.333; -61.167.
A small group of rocks 4 nautical miles (7.4 km; 4.6 mi) southwest of Spring Point in Hughes Bay, Graham Land.
Surveyed by K.V. Blaiklock of FIDS from the Norsel in 1955.
Named by UK-APC for Peter Mark Roget, a member of the committee which planned the expedition of the Chanticleer (1828–31) and author in 1852 of the Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases Classified and Arranged so as to Facilitate the Expression of Ideas and Assist in Literary Composition.[8]