Named features of the bay, from north to south, include:
Hayes Head . A prominent headland, high, overlooking the north extremity of Wood Bay, standing north of Kay Island. Mapped by the
United States Geological Survey (USGS) from surveys and United States Navy air photos, 1955-63. Named by the United States
Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for Miles O. Hayes, geologist at McMurdo Station, 1965-66 season.
Cape Johnson . An ice-covered cape in northern Wood Bay at the east side of the terminus of Tinker Glacier. Discovered in 1841 by Captain
James Clark Ross, Royal Navy who named it for Captain Edward John Johnson, RN.
Kay Island . A small island lying east of Cape Johnson in the north part of Wood Bay. Discovered in 1841 by Captain James Clark Ross, and named by him for Lieutenant Joseph W. Kay, Dir. of the Rossbank Observatory in Tasmania, who was third lieutenant on the ship Terror. Originally charted by Ross as a group of three islands, only this one is now known to exist.
Edmonson Point . A rounded, largely ice-free point lying below
Mount Melbourne along the west side of Wood Bay. Mapped by USGS from surveys and United States Navy air photos, 1955-63. Named by US-ACAN for Larry D. Edmonson, satellite geodesy scientist at
McMurdo Station, winter party 1966.
Willows Nunatak . A nunatak standing inland from the south shore of Wood Bay, rising above the col between Cape Washington and Mount Melbourne. Mapped by USGS from surveys and United States Navy air photos, 1955-63. Named by US-ACAN for A.O. Dennis Willows, biologist at McMurdo Station, summer 1965-66.
Cape Washington . A prominent cape, high, marking the south extremity of the peninsula which separates Wood Bay and Terra Nova Bay. Discovered in 1841 by Captain James Clark Ross, and named by him for Captain
John Washington, Royal Navy, who was secretary of the
Royal Geographical Society, 1836-40. ==References==