Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2016C01080:clause:1_2
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2016C01080
Segment Type: clause
Provision Reference: sch 1 cl 2
Character Range: 100770–103104

2  Description
  Cape Geology is located in the south‑western corner of Granite Harbour, southern Victoria Land, at 77°00′14″S, 162°32′52″E, approximately 100 km northwest of Ross Island. The Area consists of raised boulder beach terraces, weathered rocky steppes and irregular rock platforms around Cape Geology, rising rapidly to the south to include a well‑defined elevated cirque containing a small ice field.
The boundaries of the Area include the water catchment and encompass the elevated cirque from the small ice field down to the coastline.
The north‑western boundary is marked by a brass plaque in a boulder along the shoreline (77°00′19″S, 162°31′53″E (map point M1)) 400 m southwest of Cape Geology.
The boundary then continues as follows:
 (a) starting at map point M1, it extends south‑southeast for 260 m to a large boulder (marked by a cairn) with terrier bolt (77°00′27″S, 162°33′08″E (map point M2)) at 118 m above sea level on the ridge above the campsite;
 (b) then for 250 m up this ridge to a point at 162 m above sea level marked by an iron tube with bamboo pole;
 (c) then for 300 m up this ridge to a large pointed rock at 255 m above sea level (77°00′40″S, 162°31′46″E) near the edge of the permanent ice field;
 (d) then south for 150 m across the ice field to the western edge of a prominent line of exposed rock and moraine in the south‑western corner of the Area at 325 m above sea level;
 (e) then following this line of rock east until the exposure is buried by the ice field;
 (f) then southeast across the ice field for 500 m to the edge of a second and more prominent exposure at just over 400 m above sea level (77°00′59″S, 162°33′22″E (map point M3));
 (g) then following the upper edge of this exposure, crossing the ice field southeast to approximately 325 m above sea level where the ice‑free eastern boundary ridge and the ice field converge (77°01′16″S, 162°34′15″E);
 (h) then following the ridge crest northeast for 1 550 m to a low point on the ridge approximately 392 m above sea level (77°00′13″S, 162°36′10″E (map point M4));
 (i) then descending due north to the coast at the eastern extremity of the boulder beach of Botany Bay (77°00′12″S, 162°36′12″E (map point M5)).
The mean high water mark of the coastline forms the northern boundary of the Area between map points M1 and M5.