Balleny Islands
The
Balleny Islands () form a chain of uninhabited, mainly
volcanic,
islands in the
Southern Ocean stretching from 66°15' to 67°35'S and 162°30' to 165°00'E. The group forms a chain that extends for about 160 km in a northwest-southeast direction. The islands are heavily glaciated and are of volcanic origin. Ice tongues project from their slopes into the sea.
The group contains three main islands:
Young,
Buckle and
Sturge, which lie in a line from northwest to southeast, and several smaller ones: Row Island, Borradaile Islands (with
Swan Base, a shelter hut),
Sabrina Islet (with
Sabrina Refuge, a shelter hut), and The Monolith.
The
Antarctic Circle crosses very close to Borradaile Island, in the eight kilometre channel between Young and Buckle Islands. Buckle Island and the nearby
Sabrina Islet are home to several colonies of
Adelie and
Chinstrap penguins.
The English
whaling captains
John Balleny and
Thomas Freeman first sighted the group in
1839: Freeman was the first person to land on any of the islands on
February 9 1839, and it was the first landing south of the
Antarctic Circle. The islands' area totals 400 km² and the highest point reaches 1524 m (the unclimbed
Brown Peak on
Sturge Island).
The islands form part of the
Ross Dependency, claimed by
New Zealand (see claims on
Antarctica).