imagery) The surface of Alexander Island is predominantly ice-covered. There exist some exposed
nunataks and a few ice-free areas of significant size, including Ablation Point Massif. The nunataks are the peaks of north–south trending mountain ranges and hills. They include the
Colbert,
Havre,
Lassus,
Rouen,
Sofia University, and
Walton Mountains, the
Staccato Peaks, the
Lully Foothills, the
Finlandia Foothills, the
Elgar Uplands, and the
Douglas Range. These mountains, peaks, hills, and uplands are surrounded by a permanent ice sheet, which consists of glaciers that flow off of Alexander Island. These glaciers flow west into the
Bach and
Wilkins Ice Shelves and Bellingshausen Sea, and east into the George VI Ice Shelf. The George VI Ice Shelf is fed by both by
outlet glaciers from the ice cap on Palmer Land and Alexander Island. Another notable feature of Alexander Island is
Hodgson Lake, a former
subglacial lake that has emerged from under an ice sheet that had covered it. Hodgson Lake is long by , and has a deep
water column that lies sealed beneath a thick perennial lake ice. The northern side of Hodgson Lake is bounded by the
Saturn Glacier, which flows east into George VI Sound, while the southern side of Hodgson Lake is bounded by the northern face of
Citadel Bastion. During the
Last Glacial Maximum, Hodgson Lake was covered by the ice sheet at least thick. This ice sheet started thinning about 13,500 years ago. It retreated and left Hodgson Lake covered by perennial ice sometime before 11,000 years ago. This lake has been covered by perennial ice since that time. Other features on the island include
Damocles Point and
Mount Tyrrell.
Brahms Inlet Brahms Inlet () is an ice-filled
inlet, long and wide, indenting the north side of
Beethoven Peninsula on Alexander Island between
Harris Peninsula and
Derocher Peninsula, while the headland
Mazza Point lies immediately northeast of the inlet and
Mount Grieg lies immediately southeast of the base of Brahms Inlet. It was observed from the air and first mapped by the
Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition (RARE), 1947–48, and re-mapped from the RARE air photos by
Derek J.H. Searle of the
Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey in 1960. It was named by the
UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee after
Johannes Brahms, the German composer.
Harris Peninsula Harris Peninsula () is a broad snow-covered
peninsula surmounted by
Mount Lee, between
Verdi Inlet and
Brahms Inlet on the north side of the
Beethoven Peninsula, located in the southwest portion of Alexander Island,
Antarctica. It is one of eight peninsulas of Alexander Island. It was photographed from the air by the RARE, 1947–48, and mapped from these photographs by
D. Searle of the
Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey, 1960. It was named by the
Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Commander
Michael J. Harris,
U.S. Navy,
Commanding Officer of Squadron
VXE-6, from May 1982 to May 1983.
Lyadov Glacier Lyadov Glacier () is a glacier flowing east-northeast from
Harris Peninsula, Alexander Island, into
Brahms Inlet. It was named by the USSR Academy of Sciences in 1987 after
Anatoly Lyadov (1855–1914), a Russian composer. ==Geology==