Definition of Enderby Land

1. Noun. A region of Antarctica between Queen Maud Land and Wilkes Land; claimed by Australia.


Lexicographical Neighbors of Enderby Land

Encephalartos caffer
Encephalitozoon hellum
Encratite
Encratites
Encyclia
Encyclia citrina
Encyclia tampensis
Encyclia venosa
End of Cycle
End of Cycles
Endamoeba
Endamoeba histolytica
Endamoebidae
Endecott
Enderby Land (current term)
Endicott
Endo
Endo's fuchsin agar
Endo's medium
Endo agar
Endodermophyton
Endodontidae
Endoeuropean
Endomyces geotrichum
Endoprocta
Endothia aspartic proteinase
Ends
Enea Silvio Piccolomini
Eneas

Literary usage of Enderby Land

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain). (1900)
"The ice between Bouvet island and Enderby land in those latitudes was ... \Ve only met with it near Enderby Land, about 100 sea miles to the north; ..."

2. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: “a” Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature ...edited by Hugh Chisholm edited by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"... or to Enderby Land." The ships were in bad repair and ill- adapted for navigation in the ice, and many of the officers were not devoted to their chief; ..."

3. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society by Royal Astronomical Society (1870)
"Repulse Bay and Yokohama ; Enderby Land and ... Repulse Bay and neighbourhood of Lake Baikal; Enderby Land and Calcutta; ..."

4. The International Geography by Hugh Robert Mill (1915)
"The German Deep- Sea Expedition, under Chun, visited the Antarctic seas in 1898, reaching 64° 14' S. north of Enderby Land. A British expedition in the ..."

5. Essays on Astronomy: A Series of Papers on Planets and Meteors, the Sun and by Richard Anthony Proctor (1872)
"Repulse Bay and Yokohama ; Enderby Land and ... Repulse Bay and neighbourhood of Lake Baikal; Enderby Land and Calcutta; ..."

6. Proceedings by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain), Norton Shaw, Francis Galton, William Spottiswoode, Clements Robert Markham, Henry Walter Bates, John Scott Keltie (1870)
"66° and 69° s., and from 105° K. longitude to the meridian of Greenwich, proving that Kemp and Enderby Land is either one or two island* of no great extent, ..."

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