Tabarin Peninsula

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Brown Bluff on the Tabarin Peninsula

The Tabarin Peninsula is the eastern extremity of Trinity Peninsula at the tip of Graham Land in the British Antarctic Territory.

The peninsula is 15 nautical miles long and 5 to 12 nautical miles wide, lying south of the trough between Hope Bay and Duse Bay. It is bounded to the north-west by Depot Glacier and Mondor Glacier, and extends south to the Erebus and Terror Gulf.

Discovering and exploration

The peninsula was discovered and charted by the Swedish Antarctic Expedition, 1901–1904, led by Otto Nordenskjöld and Carl Anton Larsen.

The peninsula was mapped in 1946 by the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey and named after Operation Tabarin, the naval code name for the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey in wartime from 1943 to 1945. This name was in turn derived from the Paris night club 'Bal Tabarin', typifying night work and the chaos in launching the operation. Named in conjunction with it was the Mondor Glacier on the Trinity Peninsula – named after the buffoon Mondor, purveyor of quack medicines in the early 17th century French work Recueil général des oeuvres et fantaisies de Tabarin.

Geography

Icebergs in Hope Bay, northern side of the peninsula

The Tabarin Peninsula extends from the northernmost point of the Antarctic Peninsula southwards into the Weddell Sea for about fifteen miles. It is connected to the mainland by an isthmus about seven and a half miles wide which lies between Hope Bay to the north and Duse Bay to the south. The average height of the peninsular is about 820 feet and the highest point, at around 3,281 feet, is Mount Taylor, which stands just north of the isthmus.[1]

Brown Bluff on the east side of the peninsula

To the east of the peninsula lies the Antarctic Sound and Trepassey Bay is an indentation half way along the east coast and above it is a basalt tuya known as Brown Bluff. Cape Green and Cape Burd form the southerly extremities before the coast turns north into Duse Bay. Recently, more of the ground surface of the peninsula has become exposed by the melting of ice, and its geological structure is becoming clearer. Near Trepassey Bay there is a bed of steeply-dipping quartz-rich sandstones and mudstones 200 feet thick which are probably part of the Hope Bay Formation dating to the Permian-Triassic. Dioritic rocks in this area are probably part of the early Cretaceous Antarctic Peninsula batholith. Rocks exposed above Duse Bay are Mesozoic marine sediments dipping gently to the southeast, and consisting of 60% coarse-grained conglomerates, 30% mudstones and 10% sandstones.[1]

Flora and fauna

Gentoo penguins breed at Brown Bluff

The crumbling cliffs of Brown Bluff tower over Trepassey Bay, causing rock falls and scree slopes, and some wind-eroded boulders fall to the beach below. There are a few lichens on boulders at the top of the beach and some mosses grow higher up the slope, but no vascular plants grow here. Weddell seals often haul out on the beach and leopard seals hunt offshore. This is a breeding site for gentoo and Adélie penguins, Cape petrels, snow petrels, skuas and kelp gulls. Other birds that probably breed here include the southern giant petrel, the southern fulmar and Wilson's storm petrel.[2]

References