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Antarctic Names

The Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (ACAN) is charged with selecting commemorative names for recommendation to the U.S. Board on Geographic Names (BGN) for formal recognition by the United States.

The problem of geographic nomenclature in Antarctica differs from that of any land area of comparable size and is unique in the world. Antarctica has no indigenous population so there is no history of cultural ties to geography. Human presence has a relatively short history and is often temporary. The continent has been visited and explored by the representatives of many nations, who, by their heroic efforts to broaden man's knowledge of this land of ice and snow, have fully demonstrated the international nature of the world of science. Most major features of Antarctica have been discovered and mapped but a vast number of secondary features continue to be only partially delineated and remain unnamed. There is no sovereign territory and instead the region is managed under an international agreement, the Antarctic Treaty. The Advisory Committee on Antarctic names (ACAN) follows the Antarctica policy which guides ACAN in recommending names to the BGN for formal recognition by the United States. 

To propose a name in Antarctica, please read the Antarctica policy and submit information to BGNEXEC@usgs.gov.