Chagneau Peak - floehopper/wiki GitHub Wiki
Chaigneau Peak (65°13′S 64°1′W) is a sharp peak, 760 metres (2,500 ft) high, standing immediately southeast of Blanchard Ridge on the west coast of Graham Land. It was probably first sighted by the Belgian Antarctic Expedition of 1897–99. It was charted by the French Antarctic Expedition, 1908–10, under Jean-Baptiste Charcot, who named it for Chaigneau, then Governor of Provincia de Magallanes, Chile. -- Wikipedia
Longitude: -64.021; Latitude: -65.2119. Rising to 760m on E side of Penola Stait, Graham Coast, was roughly mapped by FAE, 1908-10, in 1909 and provisionally called Mont Rude, probably after Fran ois Rude (1784-1855), French sculptor (Charcot, 1910, p.210 and map p.267) or, descriptively, Mont Diamant [=mount diamond] (Charcot, 1910, p.264); renamed by FAE Pic Chaigneau after Señor Chaigneau, then Governor of Provïncia de Magallanes, Chile, who assisted the expedition (Charcot, 1910, p.25, 365). Mount Diamond, referring to the provisional name (Charcot, [1911b], p.223). Mount Rude (Charcot, [1911b], p.234). Chaigneau Peak (USHO, 1943, p.138; APC, 1959a, p.5; BAS chart 3572, 12.viii.1960). Pico Chaigneau (Argentina. IGM map, 1946; Chile. IHA, 1974, p.72). The peak was photographed from the air by FIDASE in 1956-57. Picco Chaigneau (Zavatti, 1958, Tav. 7). Chagineau [sic] Peak (USOO chart 6945, 1963). Pico Chaineau, as rejected form (Chile. IHA, 1974, p.72).",9,2481,POINT (-2458102.2341124415 1197781.504618425) -- British Antarctic Territory Gazetteer