Eadie Island
Eadie Island | |
Location | |
Location: | 61°28’45"S, 55°56’31"W |
Data |
Eadie Island is a small island which lies between Aspland Island and O'Brien Island to the south-west of Elephant Island in the eastern cluster of the South Shetland Islands in the British Antarctic Territory.
The isle was roughly charted in February-March 1820 by Bransfield, who called this group of three islands 'O'Briens Islands'. It further charted in February 1821 by the Russian Antarctic Expedition under Bellingshausen. Later charts showed Eadie as part of Aspland Island and called descriptively 'Sugarloaf Peninsula'. It was recharted by Discovery Investigations in January 1937 and named 'Eadie Island' after the Dockyard Manager of the Melbourne Harbour Trust in Williamstown, Australia, who assisted Discovery Investigations.
The island was photographed from the air by the Falkland Islands and Dependencies Aerial Survey Expedition in the season 1956-57 and was visited by the Joint Services Expedition to the Elephant Island Group in January 1977, on which occasion the summit was climbed.
References
- Gazetteer and Map of The British Antarctic Territory: Eadie Island
The South Shetland Islands, British Antarctic Territory |
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