Turnpike Bluff
Turnpike Bluff is a conspicuous rock formation in the Shackleton Mountains of Antarctica.
Exploration
First mapped in 1957 by the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition, and so named because it marks entry to a crevassed area of Recovery Glacier through which the Expedition's vehicles had difficulty in passing on their journey from Shackleton Base to the South Pole in 1957.Location
Turnpike Bluff is in the south of the Otter Highlands, to the north of the Recovery Glacier.It lies five nautical miles southwest of Mount Homard, at the southwest extremity of the Shackleton Range.
Geology
The Turnpike Bluff Group is a sedimentary sequence of rocks exposed on the south flank of the Shackleton Range. The sequence includes basal clastics and quartzite, followed by carbonate-bearing clastics with Riphean age stromatolite colonies, and capped by over 1 km of greywacke and quartzitic arenite, alternating with pelite. The sequence is underlain unconformably by an Archean granitoid basement. Metamorphism occurred at 526 Ma.The group contains four formations, named after Wyeth Heights, Stephenson Bastion, Flett Crags and Mount Wegener.
These are features along the southern margin of the Shackleton Mountains, from west to east.