Latest Additions to British Antarctic Territory Gazetteer
The following names were approved as new names and included in the gazetteer in March and April 2010
| New Name | Location | Description |
| Barnola Glaicer | 64°14' 8"S, 58°03'36"W | Glacier 6 km long and 4 km wide, flowing west off James Ross Island into Röhss Bay. Named after Jean-Marc Barnola, leader of the French/British ice core drilling projects on James Ross Island and Berkner Island (APC, 2012). | Foord Glaicer | 64°08'20"S, 58°02'17"W | Glacier 3.5 km long and 3.3 km wide, flowing north-west off James Ross Island into the Prince Gustav Channel. Named after Sue Foord who worked on the ice core drilling teams on James Ross Island and Berkner Island for BAS (APC, 2012). | Herniman Glaicer | 64°16'59"S, 58°09'58"W | Glacier 2 km long and 2 km wide, flowing north-west off James Ross Island into Röhss Bay. Named after Simon Herniman, field assistant for BAS (2003-09), who worked on ice core drilling projects on James Ross Island and Berkner Island (APC, 2012). | Rott Inlet | 64°27'00"S, 59°53'00"W | Bay, west of Sobral Peninsula, east of the Detroit Plateau, on the Nordenskjöld Coast. The head of the bay is fed by Dinsmoor, Bombardier and Edgeworth glaciers. Named after Professor Helmut Rott, glaciologist at the University of Innsbruck, for his work on the break up of the Larsen Ice Shelf (APC, 2012). | Spert Arch | 63°51'18"S, 60°58'19"W | High curved sea arch approximately 20 m in height and with a passage approximately 100 m long, on the south-west of Spert Island. Named in association with the island (APC, 2012). | Symplegades, The | 63°51'42"S, 60°59'09"W | Vertical cliffs approximately 100-150 m high, either side of a narrow but navigable passage, west Spert Island. Named after the mythological clashing rocks at the Bosporus, which clashed together randomly, crushing anything between them (APC, 2012). |
