66°36′S91°30′E / 66.600°S 91.500°E / -66.600; 91.500.
Channel glacier, 5 nautical miles (9.3 km; 5.8 mi) wide and 6 nautical miles (11 km; 6.9 mi) long, flowing north from the continental ice to the coast close east of Krause Point.
Delineated from aerial photographs taken by USN OpHjp, 1946-47, and named by US-ACAN for Ens. Teddy E. Jones, USNR, photo interpreter with the Naval Photographic Interpretation Center, who
served as recorder and assistant with the USN OpWml parties which established astronomical control stations along Wilhelm II, Knox and Budd Coasts in 1947–48.[2]
66°50′S89°25′E / 66.833°S 89.417°E / -66.833; 89.417
Glacier about 9 nautical miles (17 km; 10 mi) long, flowing north to Posadowsky Bay immediately east of Gaussberg.
The glacier was observed from the summit of Gaussberg by the Gauss expedition under Drygalski, 1901-03.
It was named after Drygalski's Posadowsky Bay by US-ACAN in 1955 following studies of the aerial photographs taken by USN OpHjp, 1946-47.[4]