Bowers Mountains


Bowers Mountains is a group of north–south trending mountains in Antarctica, about long and wide, bounded by the coast on the north and by the Rennick Glacier, Canham Glacier, Black Glacier and Lillie Glacier in other quadrants.
They are west of the Usarp Mountains, north of the Freyberg Mountains, northeast of the Concord Mountains, east of the Anare Mountains.

Exploration and naming

The seaward end was first sighted in February 1911 from the Terra Nova, under Lt. Harry L.L. Pennell, Royal Navy, and was subsequently named "Bowers Hills" in honour of Henry Robertson Bowers who perished with Captain Robert Falcon Scott on their return from the South Pole in 1912.
The feature was photographed from United States Navy aircraft in 1946-47 and 1960–62, and was surveyed and mapped by the United States Geological Survey in 1962–63.
The name was amended to Bowers Mountains upon USGS mapping which showed the group to be a major one with peaks rising to nearly.

Location

The Bowers Mountains extend north into the Pacific Ocean.
The Stuhlinger Ice Piedmont is at the northern end of the mountains.
The Explorers Range runs along the northwest side of the range beside the Rennick Glacier.
Further south the Lanterman Range runs along the side of the Rennick Glacier and its tributary, the Canham Glacier, which defines the southwest limit of the range.
The Alamein Range and Salamander Range are further south.
The Crown Hills form the southern tip of the range, between the Canham Glacier and the Black Glacier to the east, which flows north to join the Lillie Glacier to the east of the Mount Sterling massif.
The Molar Massif is between the Lanterman Range and the Mount Sterling massif.
Further north, the Posey Range forms the eastern edge of the Bowers Mountains, with the Lillie Glacier to its east.

Major glaciers

  • Rennick Glacier, a broad glacier, nearly long, which is one of the largest in Antarctica. It rises on the polar plateau westward of Mesa Range and is wide, narrowing to near the coast.
  • Canham Glacier, a tributary glacier about long which drains the northwest part of Evans Névé. The glacier drains northwest between the Alamein Range and Salamander Range and enters the Rennick Glacier westward of Bowers Peak.
  • Black Glacier, a broad tributary to the Lillie Glacier flowing northeast, marking the southeast extent of the Bowers Mountains.
  • Lillie Glacier, a large glacier in Antarctica, about long and wide. It lies between the Bowers Mountains on the west and the Concord Mountains and Anare Mountains on the east, flowing to Ob' Bay on the coast and forming the Lillie Glacier Tongue.

    Features

Geographical features include: