Named features of the Daniell Peninsula include:
Mount Prior . A mountain, high, about west of Mount Brewster, rising at the head of Whitehall Glacier in the west part of Daniell Peninsula. Named by
New Zealand Geological Survey Antarctic Expedition (NZGSAE), 1957–58, for George T. Prior of the Mineral Department, British Museum, who studied and analyzed the rocks obtained from this region by the
British National Antarctic Expedition (BrNAE), 1901-04.
Mount Brewster . A small peak, high, that rises above the general level of the central part of Daniell Peninsula and marks its greatest elevation. Named in 1841 by Sir
James Clark Ross for Sir
David Brewster, Scottish physicist.
Cape Jones . The cape lying immediately southeast of Mount Lubbock and marking the south tip of Daniell Peninsula. Discovered in January 1841 by Sir James Clark Ross who named it for Captain William Jones, Royal Navy.
Mount Lubbock . A coastal peak, high, rising immediately north of Cape Jones at the south end of Daniell Peninsula. Discovered in January 1841 by Sir James Clark Ross who named it for
Sir John Lubbock, treasurer of the Royal Society.
Touried Peak . Small ice-covered peak, high, situated northwest of the summit of Mount Lubbock in the south end of Daniell Peninsula, Victoria Land. The name given by
New Zealand Antarctic Place Names Committee (NZ-APC) in 1966 is descriptive of the exceptionally broken ice summit.
Narrow Neck . A narrow, but elevated isthmus or neck of land between Langevad Glacier and Mandible Cirque in the south part of Daniell Peninsula. The feature serves to join Tousled Peak and the Mount Lubbock vicinity to the main mass of Daniell Peninsula. The descriptive name was applied by NZ-APC in 1966.
Mandible Cirque . A spectacular cirque indenting the coast of Daniell Peninsula west-southwest of Cape Phillips. Named in 1966 by the NZ-APC for its appearance in plan and oblique views.
Cape Phillips . A cape approximately midway along the east side of Daniell Peninsula, southeast of Mount Brewster. Discovered in January 1841 by Sir James Clark Ross who named it for Lieutenant Charles G. Phillips of the Terror.
Cape Daniell . A cape at the northeast extremity of Daniell Peninsula which marks the south side of the entrance to Tucker Inlet. Discovered, January 15, 1841, by Sir James Clark Ross who named it for Professor
John Frederic Daniell, chemist of King's College, Cambridge University, and Foreign Secretary of the Royal Society. ==References==