1962 photograph of Cape Geddes, showing Chinstrap Penguins, with Rudmose Rocks in the background
Rudmose Rocks (60°40′33.5″S44°36′05.7″W / 60.675972°S 44.601583°W / -60.675972; -44.601583) is a group of rocks 0.4 nautical miles (800 meters) north-northwest of Cape Geddes, off the north coast of Laurie Island in the South Orkney Islands. The rocks were charted in 1903 by the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition under William Speirs Bruce, who named them for Robert Neal Rudmose-Brown, naturalist of the expedition.[1]
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RudmoseRocks (60°40′33.5″S 44°36′05.7″W / 60.675972°S 44.601583°W / -60.675972; -44.601583) is a group of rocks 0.4 nautical miles (800 meters) north-northwest...
Rudmose Brown, p. 24. Rudmose Brown, pp. 28–33. Rudmose Brown, p. 34. Rudmose Brown, p. 57. Rudmose Brown, pp. 36–37. Rudmose Brown, p. 45. Rudmose Brown...
square (6m × 6m), with two windows, fitted as quarters for six people. Rudmose Brown wrote: "Considering that we had no mortar and no masons' tools it...
(University of Cambridge), 2018, p.176. ISBN 978-0-901021-26-7 Headland, p.167. Rudmose Brown, R. N.; Pirie, J. H.; Mossman, R. C. (2002). The Voyage of the Scotia...
sovereignty, a key to securing a claim over a mostly desolate area. Robert Rudmose-Brown, who participated in Bruce's expedition, expressed a different view...
237..744G. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2005.06.015. PMID 17837768. Brown, R. N. Rudmose (1905). "The Botany of Gough Island". The Journal of the Linnean Society...