Regional Southern Thule is the southernmost island group in the
South Sandwich Islands, an archipelago in the
Southern Atlantic Ocean. The South Sandwich Islands are a group of eleven volcanic islands, most of which are volcanically active. They are located about north of Antarctica and about the same distance southeast from the
Falklands Islands. Politically, the South Sandwich Islands are a
UK overseas territory and managed as part of the
South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands. They were declared a
marine protected area in 2012, with additional expansion taking place in 2019.
Local The Southern Thule group consists of three islands, the southern-most pair
Thule Island and
Cook Island, and the smaller
Bellingshausen Island to their northeast. They rise from an east-west trending
wave-cut platform on top of a broad submerged volcano with a width of , and a length of at depth. The western side of the volcano has steeper slopes than the eastern side. The flanks of this volcano feature ridges and domes, as well as traces of
mass wasting such as chutes. The islands are surrounded by shallow shelves at depth, which probably formed through erosion during
glacial periods, when sea levels were lower. Several
seamounts lie south and west of Southern Thule, including
Kemp Caldera, Adventure Bank and Nelson Seamount. Bellingshausen and Thule Islands are both simple volcanic cones with a
summit crater. The crater on Thule is water-filled, and there is a
parasitic vent on the southeastern side of the island. Cook Island is more complex and might consist of multiple volcanic cones. Where there are outcrops, all three islands appear to consist of layers of
lava flows and
scoria or
pyroclastics. • Bellingshausen Island has dimensions of , with a north-south orientation. It is roughly triangular with Salamander Point in the north, Hardy Point in the southwest, and Isaacson Point in the southeast. A further
pedunculate peninsula juts out from the northeastern side and forms Jagged Point. The coasts are dominated by cliffs, lava shelves and beaches. Inland, slopes and terraces emanate from the summit crater. The highest point of the island is Basilisk Peak; its elevation above sea level is variously given as or . The about wide summit crater is about deep and drained underground. In the cliffs and the crater there are outcrops of
lava flows and
scoria. Unlike the other two islands, Bellingshausen is almost free of ice, with most of the terrain covered with scoria or
lava flows. The ice features
crevasses. • Cook Island has dimensions of and is rectangular in shape, extending east-west. The "corners" are formed by the northwestern cape at Tilbrook Point, the northeastern cape at Resolution Point, the southeastern cape at Longton Point and the southwestern cape at Reef Point. There is also an eastern cape at Swell Point and southern one at Jeffries Point. The island is almost entirely surrounded by
cliffs, except at narrow locations and where glaciers enter the sea. Mount Holdgate and high Mount Harmer rise on the eastern side of the island, which features several cone-shaped peaks. • Thule Island has dimensions of and has a trapezoid shape with the broad side towards the east. The capes of the trapezoid are formed by Cape Flannery to the southwest, Morrell Point to the northwest and Beach Point to the northeast, while the southeastern end has a complex shape: Hewison Point projects far from the coast towards Twitcher Rock, while Herd Point farther south delimits a bay between Hewison Point and Herd Point, Ferguson Bay. The coasts are formed by alternations of ice cliffs, regular cliffs, rocky platforms and rocky shelves, with bouldery beaches providing access to the island. The highest point is high Mount Larsen. The inland of Thule features a large, wide
caldera with hints of a wide inner crater. One observation in 1962 found a deep
volcanic crater with a green
crater lake, which in another survey in 1997 had been replaced by a depression in the ice cover. The two western capes may have been formed by lava flows that exited the caldera on its western side. Between Cook and Thule Island lies the
Douglas Strait with a
caldera at depth. Elsewhere, the sea between the two islands only reaches depths of and the strait is no more than wide, its seafloor covered with sediment. The caldera floor contains a debris mound that may have formed from a landslide at Thule Island. Other features are concentric arches that may indicate that the caldera is nested, and large cones that could be
tephra cones. Another submarine caldera is located south of Bellingshausen Island and east of Cook Island; it is named Resolution Caldera and is open to the south. It reaches a depth of below sea level, while its eastern rim rises to a depth of , and has a width of . The Douglas Strait caldera has an estimated volume of and the Resolution one of ; both may have formed through multiple eruptions.
Composition Bellingshausen has produced
basaltic andesite, while Cook volcanic rocks range from
basalt to
dacite and Thule has produced
andesite and
dacite.
Phenocrysts include
augite,
hypersthene and
plagioclase. All volcanic rocks define a predominantly
tholeiitic suite, but there are
calc-alkaline members. The tholeiitic magmas form through the melting of
pyrolite mantle triggered by the entry of water released from the
subducted crust in about depth. The calc-alkaline magmas form when the subducted crust undergoes a transformation into
eclogite-
quartz at depths of , which upon melting yields the calc-alkaline melts.
Palagonite tuffs crop out on Bellingshausen and Thule. == Climate, vegetation and animal life ==