Nattriss Head, a small but prominent rock
headland, marks the south side of the entrance to Drygalski Fjord. Like the fjord, it was charted by Filchner's expedition. It was originally named Nattriss Point for
E.A. Nattriss, shipping officer to the
Discovery Committee, following survey by
Discovery Investigations personnel in 1927. It was later renamed Nattriss Head to avoid confusion with Nattriss Point on
Saunders Island in the
South Sandwich Islands. Brandt Cove is a
cove on the south side of the fjord, north of the head of
Larsen Harbour. It was surveyed by the
South Georgia Survey in the period 1951–57, and named by the
UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee for American economist
Karl Brandt.
Mount Mair sits south of Brandt Cove, separating it from Larsen Harbour. Trendall Crag is a
mountain crag overlooking the north side of the fjord at the southeast end of
South Georgia. Surveyed by the
South Georgia Survey (SGS) from 1951 to 1957 by a research group led by English explorer
Duncan Carse, it was named after
Alec Trendall, an English geologist who took part in the SGS expedition. The crag has an elevation of . == References ==