Destination Nunataks

The Destination Nunataks (-72.25°N, 165.46667°W) are a group of peaks and nunataks, 9 nmi long and 4 nmi wide, rising to 2,565 m at Pyramid Peak and including Sphinx Peak, Andrews Peak, Mummy Ridge, and unnamed nunataks to the northwest, located in northeast Evans Névé, 7 nmi northwest of the Barker Range, Victoria Land, Antarctica.

Exploration and naming
This group was visited in 1970–71 by a Victoria University of Wellington Antarctic Expedition (VUWAE) geological party led by M.G. Laird. The name "Destination Rocks" was originally used for the feature because these nunataks were near the northern limits of Laird's expedition. The name Destination Nunataks, as approved by the New Zealand Antarctic Place-Names Committee (NZ-APC) and the United States Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) in 1985, applies to the entire group described rather than to just two nunataks at the southeast end as indicated on some maps.

Location
The Destination Nunataks lie at the end of a ridge extended southeast from the West Quartzite Range. The Millen Range of the Victory Mountains lies to the east, and the Barker Range to the south. Evans Névé is to the southwest. The southern end of the Salamander Range is to the west.

Pyramid Peak
-72.26667°N, 165.58333°W. A peak in the southeast part of the Destination Nunataks, rising to 2,565 m high 1 nmi north of Sphinx Peak. Descriptively named by the Northern Party of NZFMCAE, 1962-63.

Sphinx Peak
-72.28333°N, 165.58333°W. A massive summit 1 nmi south of Pyramid Peak, in the southeast part of the Destination Nunataks. Named in association with Pyramid Peak by the Northern Party of NZFMCAE, 1962-63.

Andrews Peak
-72.28333°N, 165.41667°W. A peak 2,400 m, 3 nmi west of Pyramid Peak. Named by the New Zealand Antarctic Place-Names Committee (NZ-APC) after Peter Andrews, geologist with the VUWAE Evans Névé field party, 1971-72, who worked in this area.

Mummy Ridge
-72.26667°N, 165.65°W. A ridge 1 nmi east of Pyramid Peak. The ridge was visited in 1981-82 by Bradley Field, geologist, New Zealand Geological Survey (NZGS), who suggested the name in association with nearby Pyramid Peak and Sphinx Peak.