Keble Hills
{{Short description|Mountain range in Antarctica}}
{{Infobox mountain
| name= Keble Hills
| photo=
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| country=Antarctica | country_type=Continent
| region_type =Region
| region=Victoria Land
| parent=
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| coordinates =
| length_km= | length_note =
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| highest=
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| map = Antarctica
| map_alt =
| map_caption = Keble Hills
| map_size =
| label =
| label_position =
| range_coordinates = {{coord|-77.994296|164.14803|source:GNIS|name=Keble Hills|display=it}}
| range_coordinates_note =
| geology= | period=| orogeny=
}}
The Keble Hills ({{coord|-77.994296|164.14803|source:GNIS|name=Keble Hills}}) are an imposing line of granite hills rising to {{Convert|1300|m}}, including from west to east Murphy Peak, Handley Hill, Auger Hill and Coral Hill.
The hills separate Salmon Glacier and Garwood Valley in the Denton Hills of Victoria Land, Antarctica.
They were named by the New Zealand Geographic Board (NZGB) in 1994 after William Keble Martin, a New Zealand botanist who surveyed plants of New Zealand and the sub-Antarctic.{{sfn|Keble Hills USGS}}
Features
=Murphy Peak=
{{coord|77|59|S|164|04|E}}.
A prominent, partly ice-covered peak, {{convert|1,280|m}} high, standing at the south side of Salmon Glacier, {{convert|2.7|nmi}} southwest of Haggerty Hill, on the Scott Coast.
Named by the United States Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) in 1992 after Robert L. Murphy of Holmes and Narver, Inc., manager of the support contractor to the United States Antarctic Program, 1976-80 and 1990-92; responsible for integrating operations of the Hero/Palmer Station System and the Continental System (resulting in shared logistics and engineering capabilities) and for preparation of the McMurdo Station Long-Range Development Plan used to modernize infrastructure, 1980-92.{{sfn|Alberts|1995|p=512}}
=Handley Hill=
{{coord|-78.010782|164.211871}}.
A peak {{convert|1009|m}} high standing {{convert|0.6|nmi}} west of Auger Hill.
Named by the NZGB (1994) after W.R.C. Handley, Ph.D. supervisor to New Zealand Antarctic biologist Laurence Greenfield.{{sfn|Handley Hill USGS}}
=Auger Hill=
{{coord|-78.009398|164.265337}}.
A peak which rises to {{convert|1000|m}} high between Handley Hill and Coral Hill.
Named by the NZGB in 1994.
Shallow soil deposits occur on the summit; an auger was used to obtain deep samples.{{sfn|Auger Hill USGS}}
=Coral Hill=
{{coord|-78.006884|164.297957}}.
A peak rising to about {{convert|850|m}} high elevation {{convert|0.5|nmi}} east of Auger Hill.
The descriptive name, applied by the NZGB 1994, is suggested by the delicate rock shapes resembling filmy reef corals that have been created by years of wind erosion.{{sfn|Coral Hill USGS}}
References
{{Reflist|25em}}
Sources
{{refbegin}}
- {{citation|url=https://pubs.usgs.gov/fedgov/70039167/report.pdf |accessdate=2024-01-30 |edition=2
|editor-last=Alberts |title=Geographic Names of the Antarctic |editor-first=Fred G.
|publisher=United States Board on Geographic Names |year=1995}} {{Include-USGov |agency=United States Board on Geographic Names}}
- {{cite gnis2 |type=antarid |id=17057
|name=Auger Hill}}
- {{cite gnis2 |type=antarid |id=17074
|name=Coral Hill}}
- {{cite gnis2 |type=antarid |id=17226
|name=Handley Hill}}
- {{cite gnis2 |type=antarid |id=17239
|name=Keble Hills}}
{{sfn whitelist|CITEREFKeble_Hills_USGS|CITEREFHandley_Hill_USGS|CITEREFAuger_Hill_USGS|CITEREFCoral_Hill_USGS}}
{{refend}}
{{Include-USGov |agency=United States Geological Survey}}