14 August 1982, Argentine Islands.John Coll, Kevin Ockleton and Ambrose Morgan were lost near Petermann Island on 14 August 1982. Their bodies were not recovered. There is a memorial cross on Petermann Island.John, 23, was a diesel mechanic, from Glasgow; Kevin, 22, a physicist from Keyningham near Hull; and Ambrose, 22, a radio operator from Petersfield in Hampshire.The three had left Faraday Station on 15 July, only three weeks after mid-winter, when the sea ice was solid and travel between islands would have been relatively easy. However a great storm blew up in the region on the following day and broke up the sea ice. The three, by this time, had reached a field hut on Petermann Island, six miles to the North. They were in daily radio contact and had food and fuel for three months, by which time an airdrop would have been possible. On 13 August ice conditions had improved sufficiently for the party to explore a route back towards the Argentine Islands. Although they had been asked to contact base again on 15 August nothing was heard from them. Deteriorating weather conditions prevented the Chileans overflying the area in a Hercules that was on standby 300 miles to the North for a number of days but when air search was carried out on 20 August no trace of them could be found. The men could have attempted to travel eastwards towards the mainland where there were a number of food depots or West towards the Yalour Islands situated only three miles from the Argentine Islands. It seems that they were most probably lost as ice broke up in the difficult weather or through thin ice.Jim Turton recalls his work with the British Antarctic Survey and his recollections of life on Base F and his encounters with John Coll, Ambrose Morgan, Miles Mosley, Graham Whitfield, Mike Walker, and Geoff Hargreaves in his memoire Jim Turton remembers.Antarctic Place NameThe return from Petermann Island – August 1962Coll Glacier, Ockleton Glacier and Morgan Buttress have been named on the mainland opposite Petermann Island where John Coll, Michael Morgan, and Kevin Ockleton had sheltered before attempting to return to Faraday Station, Galindez Island, Argentine Islands in August 1982 when the sea ice broke up.Coll Glacier 65°10’30”S, 64°04’WNamed for John Coll (1959-1982), diesel mechanic; Coll Glacier is 3 km long draining south-south west from Mount Scott to enter Penola Strait east of Duseberg Buttress and east of Petermann Island.Peter Salino has sent images of the region where Coll, Morgan and Ockleton died. The landscapes are annotated with the names of the features.