Dundee Island is an ice-covered island lying east of the northeastern tip of Antarctic Peninsula and south of Joinville Island.
Petrel Base, is an Argentine scientific station in Antarctica in Dundee Island, in the Joinville Group.
The Eden Rocks are two rocks lying 1.5 km off the east coast of Dundee Island, at the northern end of the Antarctic Peninsula.
Welchness is a gravel spit which forms the west extremity of Dundee Island in the Joinville Island group.
It was discovered and partially photographed from the air by Lincoln Ellsworth on his 1935 trans-Antarctic flight from Dundee Island to the Ross Sea.
Petrel Cove is a small coastal indentation at the west end of Dundee Island between Welchness and Diana Reef.
Active Reef is an isolated reef lying in the Firth of Tay, just off the north coast of Dundee Island.
He also named nearby Dundee Island in honour of the main city on the firth.
Dundee Island in the Antarctic takes its name from the Dundee whaling expedition, which discovered it in 1892.
Named in conjunction with neighbouring Dundee Island, as the original Firth of Tay adjoins Dundee.