Opalchenie Peak
Opalchenie Peak is the peak rising to at the south extremity of the ice-covered Vinson Plateau, Sentinel Range in the Ellsworth Mountains, Antarctica. It is of low topographic prominence, just, with parent summit Fukushima Peak. The feature has a partly ice-free summit and south slopes, where two parallel ridges descend steeply southwestwards with Donnellan Glacier flowing in between and Mount Slaughter rising on the more southerly ridge. The northerly ridge was climbed up to the summit plateau by American Robert Anderson in November 1992, and subsequently used to establish a new route to Mount Vinson in 2003. Opalchenie Peak overlooks Vinson Plateau on the north, Craddock Massif on the southeast and upper Nimitz Glacier area on the southwest.
The peak is named after the Bulgarian Volunteer Force in the 1877-1878 Russo-Turkish War and the Macedonian-Adrianople Volunteer Force in the 1912-1913 Balkan Wars, ‘opalchenie’ being the Bulgarian for ‘volunteer force’.Location
Opalchenie Peak is located at, which is south by east of Mount Vinson, south of Fukushima Peak, southwest of Schoening Peak, northwest of Mount Rutford, north by east of Mount Slaughter, east of Brichebor Peak and southeast of Silverstein Peak. USGS mapping in 1961, updated in 1988.Maps
- Scale 1:250 000 topographic map. Reston, Virginia: US Geological Survey, 1988
- D. Gildea and C. Rada. Scale 1:50 000 topographic map. Omega Foundation, 2007
- Scale 1:250000 topographic map of Antarctica. Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research. Since 1993, regularly updated
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