Mount Achilles (Lua error: callParserFunction: function "#coordinates" was not found.) is a snow-covered, steep-sided mountain, 1,343 m (4,406 ft), which rises 6 km (4 mi) southwest of Mount Nestor. Surveyed by the FIDS in 1955 and named by the UK-APC for Achilles, the central figure in Homer's Iliad.[2]File:Mt Achilles and the Northern Achaean Range.jpgSkiing down the North face of Mt Achilles after the first ascent
Mount Agamemnon (Lua error: callParserFunction: function "#coordinates" was not found.) is a snow-covered mountain, 2,577 m (8,455 ft), marking the south limit of the Achaean Range. It is part of the Mount Francaismassif but has a separate summit 1.5 miles (2.4 km) west of the main peak of Mount Francais. It was surveyed by the FIDS in 1944, and again in 1955. Named by the UK-APC for Agamemnon, Commander in Chief of the Achaean forces at Troy in Homer's Iliad.[3]
Mount Nestor (Lua error: callParserFunction: function "#coordinates" was not found.) is a mountain, 1,302 m (4,272 ft), the northernmost of the Achaean Range. Its western side rises steeply from Marr Ice Piedmont; its eastern side is a jumble of crevasses and jagged rock pinnacles. Surveyed by the FIDS in 1955 and named by the UK-APC for Nestor, oldest of the Achaean chieftains fighting at Troy in Homer's Iliad.[4]