Queen Fabiola Mountains
0 sources
Queen Fabiola Mountains
Summary
Queen Fabiola Mountains is a non-geologically related mountain range[1]. It draws 7 Wikipedia views per month (non_geologically_related_mountain_range category, ranking #34 of 55).[2]
Key Facts
- Queen Fabiola Mountains is located in Antarctic Treaty area[3].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's continent is recorded as Antarctica[4].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's instance of is recorded as non-geologically related mountain range[5].
- Fabiola of Belgium is named after Queen Fabiola Mountains[6].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 244711793[7].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's GND ID is recorded as 4342214-7[8].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh86003742[9].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +1960-10-08T00:00:00Z[10].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -71.5, 'lon': 35.666666666667}[11].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/082mg6[12].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's GNIS Antarctica ID is recorded as 12250[13].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's topic's main category is recorded as Q9920457[14].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's GeoNames ID is recorded as 6623776[15].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names ID is recorded as 1109520[16].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's SCAR Composite Gazetteer place ID is recorded as 11774[17].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's Norwegian Polar Institute place name ID is recorded as bf4426a8-7de8-5f1a-9377-d3bd1fc8dd90[18].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's National Library of Israel J9U ID is recorded as 987007553779205171[19].
- Queen Fabiola Mountains's OpenStreetMap way ID is recorded as 370161479[20].
Body
Geography
Queen Fabiola Mountains is located in Antarctic Treaty area[3]. Its continent is recorded as Antarctica[4].
Designation and Status
Queen Fabiola Mountains's instance of is recorded as non-geologically related mountain range[5].
History and Context
Fabiola of Belgium is named after Queen Fabiola Mountains[6].
Why It Matters
Queen Fabiola Mountains draws 7 Wikipedia views per month (non_geologically_related_mountain_range category, ranking #34 of 55).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]