from the summit of Hogback Hill Features along the Ross Sea coast of the Wilson Piedmont Glacier on the Ross Sea include, from the north:
Cape Dunlop . Rocky point just west of Dunlop Island on the coast of Victoria Land. First mapped by the BrAE (1907–09) under
Ernest Shackleton, who named this feature Rocky Point. It has since taken its name from Dunlop Island.
Dunlop Island . Rocky island, long, lying just off the Wilson Piedmont Glacier and the coast of Victoria Land, close northeast of Cape Dunlop. First mapped by the BrAE (1907–09) under Shackleton, who named it for H.J.L. Dunlop, chief engineer of the ship Nimrod. Not: Terrace Island.
Spike Cape . A bare rocky point from which the Wilson Piedmont Glacier has receded, lying south of Dunlop Island. First mapped by the BrAE, 1910–13. The name was suggested by Seaman Forde, and adopted by Taylor, for its likeness to Spike Island at Plymouth, England.
Bay of Sails . A shallow indentation of the coast of Victoria Land between Spike Cape and Gneiss Point. The name was suggested by the Western Geological Party of the BrAE (1910–13), which while sledging across the ice at the mouth of the bay erected makeshift sails on their man-drawn sledge, thereby increasing the speed.
Kolich Point . Rock point midway between Spike Cape and Gneiss Point on the east coast of Victoria Land. Named by US-ACAN for Thomas M. Kolich, geophysicist who participated in the USARP geophysical survey of the Ross Ice Shelf in the 1973–74 and 1974–75 seasons.
Gneiss Point . Rocky point north of Marble Point, on the coast of Victoria Land. First mapped by the BrAE (1910–13) under Scott and so named because of gneissic granite found here.
Arnold Cove . A cove along the west margin of McMurdo Sound between Gneiss Point and Marble Point. Named by US-ACAN for Charles L. Arnold, leader of a USARP party that made an engineering study of Marble Point, McMurdo Station and Williams Field in the 1971–72 season.
Marble Point . A rocky promontory of marble lying north of Cape Bernacchi on the coast of Victoria Land. Mapped by the BrAE (1907–09) and so named because of the marble found there.
Hogback Hill . Rounded mountain, 735 m, rising just north of Hjorth Hill and west of Cape Bernacchi. Charted and given this descriptive name by the BrAE under Scott 1910–13.
Bernacchi Bay . Bay about wide between Marble Point and Cape Bernacchi, on the coast of Victoria Land. Named after Cape Bernacchi by the BrAE under Scott, 1910–13.
Hjorth Hill . A rounded, ice-free mountain 760 m, standing just north of New Harbor and south of Hogback Hill. Charted by the BrAE, 1910–13, led by Scott, and named for the maker of the primus lamps used by the expedition. The name is spelled Hjort's Hill in the popular narrative of Scott's expedition, but Hjorth's Hill is used on the map accompanying the narrative. The recommended spelling is based upon the form consistently used on the maps accompanying the BrAE scientific reports. ==Isolated features==