Coastal features, from west to east, include:
Belitsa Peninsula . The wide peninsula projecting in northwest direction from Trinity Peninsula. Bounded by Bone Bay to the northeast,
Charcot Bay to the southwest and Bransfield Strait to the northwest. Trapezoid in form, its west and north extremities are formed by
Cape Kjellman and Notter Point respectively. German-British mapping in 1996. Named after the town of
Belitsa in Southwestern Bulgaria.
Gavin Ice Piedmont . An ice piedmont in Trinity Peninsula, about long and between wide, extending from Charcot Bay to Russell West Glacier. Mapped from surveys by the
Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS) (1960-61). Named by the
UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) for Christopher B. Gavin-Robinson, pilot of FIDASE (1956-57).
Pettus Glacier . A narrow deeply entrenched glacier long, which flows north from
Ebony Wall into Gavin Ice Piedmont between
Poynter Hill and Tinsel Dome. Named by UK-APC for Robert N. Pettus, aircraft pilot with FIDASE, 1956-57.
Notter Point . A rocky point northeast of Cape Kjellman marking the west limit of Bone Bay. The name, applied by Argentina in 1953, memorializes Tomás Notter, a commander of English origin in Admiral
William Brown's squadron in the struggle for Argentine independence. He died fighting against the Spanish commander Romarate on March 21, 1814 aboard his small vessel
Santisima Trinidad, when his vessel grounded under enemy batteries.
Wimple Dome . Ice-covered hill, high, standing south of Hanson Hill and east of Bone Bay on the north side of Trinity Peninsula. The name was applied by members of the FIDS following their survey in 1948 and is descriptive of the shape of the feature, a wimple being a type of headdress worn by nuns.
Young Point . Rocky point south of Cape Roquemaurel at the east side of Bone Bay. Charted by the FIDS in 1948. Named by the UK-APC for Doctor Adam Young, surgeon on the brig Williams which made explorations in the South Shetland Islands and Bransfield Strait in 1820.
Cape Roquemaurel . Prominent rocky headland at the east side of the entrance to Bone Bay. Discovered by a French expedition, 1837-40, under Captain
Jules Dumont d'Urville, and named by him for Lieutenant Louis de Roquemaurel, second-in-command of the expedition ship
Astrolabe. ==Islands==