Trinity Peninsula

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Location of Trinity Peninsula.

Trinity Peninsula is the extreme northern portion of Graham Land, in the British Antarctic Territory. The peninsula extends northeastward for about 80 miles to Cape Dubouzet from an imaginary line connecting Cape Kjellman on the northwest coast and Cape Longing on the southeast coast.

The peninsula was first sighted on 30 January 1820 by Edward Bransfield, Master, Royal Navy, immediately after his charting of the newly discovered South Shetland Islands nearby. In the century following the peninsula's discovery, chartmakers used various names (Trinity Land, Palmer Land, and Land of Louis Philippe) for this portion of it, each name having some historical merit. The recommended name derives from "Trinity Land", given by Bransfield during 1820 in likely recognition of the Corporation of Trinity House, The maritime pilotage and lighthouse authority for southern Great Britain, although the precise application by him has not been identified with certainty and is a matter of different interpretation by Antarctic historians.

Map

  • Trinity Peninsula. Scale 1:250000 topographic map No. 5697. Institut für Angewandte Geodäsie and British Antarctic Survey, 1996.

Outside links

Coordinates: 63°37′S 058°20′W / 63.617°S 58.333°W / -63.617; -58.333