Venchan Bluff (Bulgarian: рид Венчан, romanizedrid Venchan, IPA: [ˈrid vɛnˈt͡ʃan]) is the mostly ice-covered bluff rising to 1283 m[1] at the end of a side ridge extending towards Lanusse Bay from Mount Parry in Stribog Mountains on Brabant Island in the Palmer Archipelago, Antarctica. It has steep and partly ice-free southwest, northwest and northeast slopes, and surmounts Djerassi Glacier to the north.

Location of Brabant Island in the Antarctic Peninsula region.

Venchan Bluff was first ascended by the French mountaineers Mathieu Cortial, Lionel Daudet and Patrick Wagnon on 21 January 2010, as a part of their route to the island's summit Mount Parry following its northwestern spur and called Nouvelle vague (New Wave). [2][3]

The peak is named after the settlement of Venchan in Northeastern Bulgaria.

Location

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Venchan Bluff is located at 64°14′54″S 62°26′45″W / 64.24833°S 62.44583°W / -64.24833; -62.44583, which is 2.46 km northwest of Mount Parry, 3.85 km east-northeast of Minot Point and 6.3 km southeast of Driencourt Point. British mapping in 1980 and 2008.

Maps

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Notes

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  1. ^ Reference Elevation Model of Antarctica. Polar Geospatial Center. University of Minnesota, 2019
  2. ^ No Man’s Land Project 2010.
  3. ^ D. Gildea. 2009-10 Antarctic Peninsula summary. The American Alpine Journal 2010. pp. 193-198.

References

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Brabant Island seen from northeast, with the summit Mount Parry in its central part; Anvers Island (on the right) and Antarctic Peninsula in the background.

This article includes information from the Antarctic Place-names Commission of Bulgaria which is used with permission.