Gilbert Strait () is a strait between
Trinity Island
Trinity Island or Île de la Trinité or Isla Trinidad is an island long and wide in the northern part of the Palmer Archipelago, Antarctica. It lies east of Hoseason Island, south of Deception Island in the South Shetland Islands, an ...
and
Tower Island
Tower Island is an Antarctic island long and high. It marks the north-east extent of Palmer Archipelago. It lies north-east of Trinity Island, separated by Gilbert Strait. Both islands are separated from the Davis Coast to the south by ...
in the
Palmer Archipelago. The strait was named by a British expedition 1828–31, under Foster, for
Davies Gilbert, President of the
Royal Society from 1827–30, and of the committee which formulated the objectives of the expedition. The strait was mapped by the
Swedish Antarctic Expedition (SAE) of 1901–04, under
Otto Nordenskjöld.
Within the Gilbert Strait, off the east coast of Cape Neumayer on Trinity Island, is a small group of rocks called the Oluf Rocks.
Just south of them is Sven Rock, and to the east are the Ryge Rocks.
All of these rocks were first photographed by the
Falkland Islands and Dependencies Aerial Survey Expedition (FIDASE) in 1955–57, mapped from these photos by the
Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS), and subsequently named by the
United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) in 1960 after the Danish freighter ''
Oluf Sven Olaf of Denmark – Danish: ''Oluf'' - may refer to:
* Olaf I of Denmark
* Olaf II of Denmark
no, Olav Håkonsson
, house = Bjelbo
, father = Haakon VI of Norway
, mother = Margaret I of Denmark
, birth_date =
...
'' and its captain,
J.C. Ryge. The freighter transported the FIDASE to
Deception Island in 1955 and 1956.
References
Straits of the Palmer Archipelago
Trinity Island
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