Visokoi is one of the
South Sandwich Islands, which lie southeast of
South Georgia in the
Southern Ocean and extend over a distance of in north-south direction.
Leskov Island is west and
Zavodovski Island north from Visokoi; together they makes up the
Traversay Islands subgroup of the South Sandwich Islands.
Icebergs occur in the surrounding waters. The island has an oval shape with a length of and a width of ; the surface area is about . The pointy end is east and ends at Irving Point, and the blunt end west with the western Sulphur Point and southwestern Wordie Point. The northernmost point is Finger Point and the southernmost Mikhaylov Point.
Cliffs and ice falls make up most of the coastline, except at Irving Point where there are an offshore reef and sandy beaches and Finger Point which is a low-lying
lava flow. The island is asymmetric, with the western side having higher cliffs and steeper slopes than the eastern side. Most of the inside of the island is covered with heavily
crevassed ice, which reaches thicknesses of and extends to the coast. The total surface area covered by ice in 1962 amounted to . The high Mount Hodson rises on the western side of the island and has a flat summit. It features a wide
summit crater surrounded by two concentric
sector collapse scars. Several
scoria cones rise from the eastern part, including Shamrock Hill and an unnamed but probably young cone which form a
nunatak. They rise slightly above the ice level and bear no evidence of craters. Visokoi Island appears to consist of a basal lava plateau, which crops out close to the coastline, and a volcanic cone that rises above the plateau. Two nested
calderas cut across both formations and are surrounded by cliffs more than high. Finger Point appears to consist of a
lava flow with preserved surface features that extends northwards from the
scree-covered slopes of Visokoi, forming a low-lying coastal platform. Several islets lie around Visokoi, such as Coffin Rock off the northeastern coast. The island is surrounded by a wide shelf at less than depth. The shelf broadens with depth to form a large submarine volcano, which reaches a width of at depth. The total volume of Visokoi complete with the submarine parts is about and consists mostly of
pillow lavas. The submarine edifice has an east-west extension, with numerous small volcanoes, chutes and traces (hummocky terrain) of a
sector collapse on the western side and a more extensive shelf cut by submarine canyons on the eastern side. From there, a submarine ridge connects Visokoi with
Candlemas Island farther south. == Geology ==