The Odell Glacier () is a glacier draining northeast between
Allan Hills
The Allan Hills () are a group of hills, mainly ice free and about long, lying just north-west of the Coombs Hills near the heads of Mawson Glacier and Mackay Glacier in the Oates Land and Victoria Land regions of Antarctica.
Exploration and n ...
and Coombs Hills into the upper
Mawson Glacier in
Victoria Land
Victoria Land is a region in eastern Antarctica which fronts the western side of the Ross Sea and the Ross Ice Shelf, extending southward from about 70°30'S to 78th parallel south, 78°00'S, and westward from the Ross Sea to the edge of the Ant ...
, Antarctica.
It was named by the
New Zealand Antarctic Place-Names Committee (NZ-APC) for
Noel Odell, who was a mountaineer and was professor of geology at the University of Otago from 1950 to 1955.
Location
The Odell Glacier forms between the
Allan Hills
The Allan Hills () are a group of hills, mainly ice free and about long, lying just north-west of the Coombs Hills near the heads of Mawson Glacier and Mackay Glacier in the Oates Land and Victoria Land regions of Antarctica.
Exploration and n ...
and the Coombs Hills, which contain Mount Brooke.
To the southwest of its head are Hall Rock, Brandau Rocks and Carapace Nunatak.
The glacier flows northeast past the Convoy Range to the Mawson Glacier.
Field camp
The United States set up an
Antarctic field camp on the glacier during the summer of 2001 at .
Tributary
Irving Glacier
.
A glacier that flows northwest between Coombs Hills and
Wyandot Ridge to enter Odell Glacier.
Named in association with nearby Wyandot Ridge after Captain R.K. Irving, U.S. Navy (USN), commander of USS ''Wyandot'' (AKA-92), a cargo ship in the Ross Sea Unit in Operation Deep Freeze IV, 1958-59.
Features

Features of the terrain around the glacier include:
Coombs Hills
.
An area of broken and largely snow-free hills and valleys between the Odell Glacier and
Cambridge Glacier.
Discovered in 1957 by the New Zealand Northern Survey Party of the
Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition (CTAE) (1956-58) and named by them for
Doug Coombs, professor of geology at the University of Otago, New Zealand, who assisted the expedition in obtaining essential petrological equipment.
Mount Brooke
.
A large isolated mountain, high, standing northwest of
Mount Gran and dominating the area near the heads of
Mackay Glacier
Mackay Glacier () is a large glacier in Victoria Land, descending eastward from the Antarctic Plateau, between the Convoy Range and Clare Range, into the southern part of Granite Harbour. It was discovered by the South magnetic pole party of the B ...
and
Mawson Glacier.
Named for Lieutenant Commander F.R. Brooke, Royal Navy, leader of the 1957 New Zealand Northern Survey Party of the CTAE, 1956-58.
Hall Rock
.
A large rock located northwest of Carapace Nunatak at the edge of the
Antarctic Plateau.
Named by the United States
Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names
The Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (ACAN or US-ACAN) is an advisory committee of the United States Board on Geographic Names responsible for recommending commemorative names for features in Antarctica.
History
The committee was established ...
(US-ACAN) for geologist Bradford A. Hall who, with Harold W. Borns, did research on the so-called Mawson Tillite in this vicinity, 1968-69.
Brandau Rocks
.
Rock exposures west of Carapace Nunatak.
Reconnoitered by the
New Zealand Antarctic Research Programme (NZARP) Allan Hills Expedition (1964), who named the rocks for Lieutenant Commander James F. Brandau, United States Navy, helicopter pilot who made a difficult rescue flight to evacuate an injured member of the expedition.
Carapace Nunatak
.
A prominent isolated nunatak, the most westerly near the head of Mackay Glacier, standing southwest of Mount Brooke where it is visible for a considerable distance from many directions.
So named by the New Zealand party of the CTAE (1956-58) because of the carapaces of small crustaceans found in the rocks.
References
Sources
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{{Antarctic fields camp
Glaciers of Victoria Land