Mount Semprebon: Difference between revisions
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'''Mount Semprebon''' ({{coord|82|4|S|88|1|W|display=inline,title}}) is a prominent, partly snow-free [[summit (topography)|peak]] rising 1 nautical mile (1.9 km) northeast of [[Mount Barsoum]] in [[Martin Hills]]. The peak was positioned by the U.S. Ellworth-Byrd Traverse Party on December 10, 1958, and named for Louis C. Semprebon, an ionospheric physicist and assistant scientific leader at [[Ellsworth Station]] in 1958. |
{{Short description|Mountain in Antarctica}}'''Mount Semprebon''' ({{coord|82|4|S|88|1|W|display=inline,title}}) is a prominent, partly snow-free [[summit (topography)|peak]] rising 1 nautical mile (1.9 km) northeast of [[Mount Barsoum]] in [[Martin Hills]]. The peak was positioned by the U.S. Ellworth-Byrd Traverse Party on December 10, 1958, and named for Louis C. Semprebon, an ionospheric physicist and assistant scientific leader at [[Ellsworth Station]] in 1958. |
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Revision as of 21:06, 8 May 2021
Mount Semprebon (82°4′S 88°1′W / 82.067°S 88.017°W) is a prominent, partly snow-free peak rising 1 nautical mile (1.9 km) northeast of Mount Barsoum in Martin Hills. The peak was positioned by the U.S. Ellworth-Byrd Traverse Party on December 10, 1958, and named for Louis C. Semprebon, an ionospheric physicist and assistant scientific leader at Ellsworth Station in 1958.
This article incorporates public domain material from "Mount Semprebon". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.