Mount Rabot

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox mountain Mount Rabot (Template:Coord) is a mountain, Template:Convert high, standing Template:Convert southeast of Mount Lecointe in the Queen Elizabeth Range in Antarctica.Template:Sfn

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Name

Mount Rabot was discovered and named by the British Antarctic Expedition (BrAE; 1907-09). Charles Rabot was editor of La Géographie, bulletin of the Société Geographique, Paris, and was an outstanding glaciologist of that period.Template:Sfn

Location

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File:C83165s1 Ant.Map Mount Rabot.jpg
Peletier Plateau in southwest of map

Mount Rabot is in the center of the Queen Elizabeth Range, to the east of the Marsh Glacier and west of the Helm Glacier. The Moore Mountains and Prince Andrew Plateau are to the south. Markham Plateau is to the north. Features near Mount Rabot include Solitary Peak to the south, Mount Counts and Rabot Glacier to the west, Moody Nunatak, Bartrum Plateau and Mount Bonaparte to the northwest, Mount Lecointe to the north, Fopay Peak and Mount Macbain to the northeast.Template:Sfn

Features

Solitary Peak

Template:Coord. A peak Template:Convert high located Template:Convert southeast of Mount Rabot. An important geologic section was measured on the feature by the Ohio State University Geological Party, 1967-68, which suggested the name because of the peak's relative isolation.Template:Sfn

Mount Counts

Template:Coord. A sharply pointed peak on the east side of Marsh Glacier marking the termination of the spur running west from Mount Rabot. Named by the New Zealand Geological Survey Antarctic Expedition (NZGSAE; 1961-62) for Lieutenant Commander William D. Counts, United States Navy, pilot on reconnaissance flights, killed in a Neptune plane crash at Wilkes Station in November 1961.Template:Sfn

Moody Nunatak

Template:Coord. A prominent isolated nunatak at the east side of Marsh Glacier, Template:Convert west of Bartrum Plateau. Named by the NZGSAE (1964-65) for Lieutenant D.M. Moody, pilot with United States Navy Squadron VX-6, who flew the southern party of NZGSAE in and out of the field.Template:Sfn

Bartrum Plateau

Template:Coord. An ice-covered plateau, Template:Convert long and Template:Convert wide, standing west of Mount Bonaparte. Named by the Northern Party of the NZGSAE (1961-62) for geologist, Professor John Bartrum of Auckland University College.Template:Sfn

Mount Bonaparte

Template:Coord. A mountain, Template:Convert high, standing Template:Convert northwest of Mount Lecointe. Discovered by the BrAE (1907-09) under Ernest Shackleton, and named for Prince Roland Bonaparte, President of the Geographical Society of Paris.Template:Sfn

Mount Lecointe

Template:Coord. A conspicuous mountain, Template:Convert high, located Template:Convert northwest of Mount Rabot. Named by the BrAE (1907-09) for Lieutenant Georges Lecointe, who was second in command of the BelgAE (1897-99) under Gerlache.Template:Sfn

Fopay Peak

Template:Coord. A peak Template:Convert northwest of Mount Macbain, on the south side of Cornwall Glacier. Named by the United States Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for Charles F. Fopay, Weather Central Meteorologist at Little America V, 1958.Template:Sfn

Crowell Buttresses

Template:Coord. A series of high snow and rock buttresses, Template:Convert long, forming the north wall of Cornwall Glacier for a distance of Template:Convert and then trending northeast an equal distance along the west side of Lowery Glacier. Named by US-ACAN after John T. Crowell (d. 1986), who served with the National Science Foundation as Antarctic Vessel Project Officer, 1960-63, and Special Projects Officer, 1963-69. He led a reconnaissance party to the Antarctic Peninsula in January 1963 to investigate the location for a U.S. station in the peninsula area.Template:Sfn

Mount Macbain

Template:Coord. A prominent mountain, Template:Convert high, standing between the mouths of Cornwall Glacier and Helm Glacier. Named by the US-ACAN for Commander Merle Macbain, United States Navy, Public Information Officer, United States Naval Support Force, Antarctica, during United States Navy OpDFrz III and IV, 1957-58 and 1958-59.Template:Sfn

References

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Sources

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