Name StatusOfficial ValidatedFeatureMountainNZ Gazette Reference2012 (53) p.1477DatumRSRGD2000GeoTag[1] PositionDescriptionOne of a group of low-lying peaks barely projectig through the icecap covering the South Polar Plateau, rising to an altitude of 3261m about 25 miles south-west of the Thorvald Nilsen Mountain massif, in the Queen Maud Range. Discovered by Amundsen in November 1911 on his journey to the South Pole and named for Olaf Bjaaland, a member of the South Polar Party. Not Mt Olaf Bjaaland.