Features and nearby features include, from west to east:
Kopito Ridge . A mostly ice-free ridge in the southeast foothills of
Detroit Plateau, which is bounded by
Boydell Glacier to the west and Zavera Snowfield to the east. Extending in northwest–southeast direction and wide. The ridge rises to high in its northwest part which is linked to Detroit Plateau east of Lobosh Peak. Named after the peaks of Golyamo (Great) Kopito and Malko (Little) Kopito in Vitosha Mountain, Western Bulgaria.
Huma Nunatak . A rocky hill rising to high in the northeast foothills of Detroit Plateau. Situated in the west part of Zavera Snowfield, south of Petkov Nunatak, northwest of
Mount Wild, east-northeast of the summit of Kopito Ridge and east-southeast of Lobosh Peak. Named after the settlement of Huma in Northeastern Bulgaria.
Petkov Nunatak . A rocky hill rising to high in the northeast foothills of Detroit Plateau. Situated in the west part of Zavera Snowfield, southwest of Rayko Nunatak, north-northwest of Mount Wild, north of Huma Nunatak and east by north of Lobosh Peak. Named after Nikola Petkov (b. 1951), geologist at St. Kliment Ohridski base in 1995/96 and subsequent seasons, and program organizer of the Bulgarian Antarctic Institute.
Rayko Nunatak . A rocky hill rising to high in the northeast foothills of Detroit Plateau. Situated on the south side of Diplock Glacier, south-southeast of Povien Peak, south of
Bezenšek Spur, southwest of
Mount Roberts and northeast of Petkov Nunatak. Surmounting Diplock Glacier to the north and Zavera Snowfield to the southeast. Named after the Bulgarian poet Rayko Zhinzifov (1839-1877).
Gredaro Point . A round and low, mostly ice-covered point on the southeast coast of Trinity Peninsula projecting into Prince Gustav Channel in Weddell Sea. Situated at the east extremity of Zavera Snowfield, south-southwest of
Marmais Point, west-northwest of
Cape Obelisk on
James Ross Island, and north-northeast of Mount Wild. British mapping in 1974. Named after Gredaro Peak in Pirin Mountain, Bulgaria.
Diplock Glacier . A narrow straight glacier, long, flowing eastward from Detroit Plateau into Prince Gustav Channel south of
Alectoria Island. Mapped from surveys by th
Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS) (1960-61). Named by the
UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) for
Bramah Joseph Diplock, British engineer who made considerable advances in the design of chain-track tractors (1885-1913). ==References==