
View of the Juneau Icefield.
Juneau Icefield is an
ice field located just north of Juneau
, Alaska
and
continues north through the border with British Columbia
and is the fifth-largest ice field in the Western
Hemisphere
, extending through an area of 3,900 square
kilometers in the Coast
Range
ranging 140 km north to south and 75 km
east to west. The icefield is the source of many glaciers including the Mendenhall Glacier
and the Taku Glacier
. The icefield is home to over 40 large
valley glaciers and 100 smaller ones. The Icefield serves as a
tourist attraction with many travellers flown in by helicopter for
quick walks on the 240 to 1,400 meter deep ice and the massive,
awe-inspiring
crevasses. The icefield, like
many of its glaciers, reached its maximum glaciation point around
1700 and has been in retreat since. In fact, of
the icefield's 19 notable glaciers, the Taku Glacier is the only
one presently advancing.
Since 1948, the Juneau Icefield Research Program has monitored
glaciers of the Juneau Icefield.
On the west side of the icefield, from
1946-2009, the terminus of the Mendenhall Glacier
has retreated over 700 meters.
Eight kilometers to the north, the
Herbert Glacier has retreated 540 meters,
while
Eagle Glacier retreated 700
meters, Gilkey Glacier 3,500 meters and Llewellyn Glacier 2,800
meters. On the south side of the icefield, the
Norris Glacier retreated 1,740 meters, the
East Twin Glacier 1,100 meters,
the
West Twin Glacier 570 meters
with only the Taku Glacier advancing. Surveys reveal the Taku as
one of the deepest glaciers of the sub-temperate icefields surveyed
at nearly 1,370 meters thick. This glacier was advancing in 1890
when viewed by
John Muir and had a large
calving front. By 1963 the glacier had
advanced 5.6 km. In 1948 the
Taku
Fjord had been completely filled in with glaical sediment and
the glacier no longer calved. From 1948-1986 the glacier had a
positive
glacier mass balance
driving the advance. From 1987-2009 the glacier has had a slightly
negative mass balance, not enough to end the advance, but if it
continues will soon slow it.
A notable
peak in the Juneau Icefield is Devils Paw
, known locally with several smaller peaks as the
Mendenhall Towers.
See also
References
External links