Mount Petras lies in the coastal region of
Marie Byrd Land,
Antarctica, and is located within the
McCuddin Mountains together with
Mount Flint which lies northwest of Mount Petras. The complex Mount Petras-Mount Flint-
Reynolds Ridge is also known as Petras Range. It lies inland from the
Amundsen Sea coast. It is an angular mountain consisting of rocky spurs in an area of , which form two ridges form a semicircular ice-filled bowl. Two other summits are high
Putzke Peak northeast of Mount Petras, high
Schwob Peak south and high
Peter Nunatak southeast. Other outcrops occur farther southwest at
Navarrette Peak, southeast at
Wallace Rock and northeast at
Erven Nunataks. The existence of an
explosion crater on its northern side was inferred by González-Ferran in 1972. Both
basement and volcanic rocks emerge from the
West Antarctic Ice Sheet as a
nunatak. The volcanic and basement rocks are separated by an
unconformity at elevation. The highest summit of Mount Petras lies on the western ridge at elevation above sea level of which about are above the
West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Most of the volcanic rocks are
hawaiite with some
mugearite, while the basement is
rhyodacitic and mostly consists of a
Cretaceous volcanic complex that makes up the bulk of Mount Petras. The basement also includes
schists,
paragneisses and
gneisses. The mugearite occurs in the form of a
lava flow, while the hawaiites form
volcaniclastic deposits as
tuff breccias and
lapilli tuffs.
Moraine debris and
talus cover exposed rocks. Mount Petras is part of the volcanic province of Marie Byrd Land, which may be a product of a
mantle plume. Other volcanoes in this province of
West Antarctic volcanoes are the
Ames Range,
Crary Mountains,
Executive Committee Range,
Flood Range,
Hobbs Coast nunataks,
Kohler Range,
Mount Murphy,
Mount Siple,
Mount Takahe and
Mount Waesche. Some of these volcanoes are still active today. Marie Byrd Land itself is a crustal dome, with its "summit" in the area of Mount Petras; the dome was probably formed by the impingement of the mantle plume under the
crust and volcanism may have spread outwards away from Mount Petras. == Geologic history ==