Grand Pacific Glacier


Grand Pacific Glacier is a 25-mile long glacier in British Columbia and Alaska. It begins in Glacier Bay National Park in the St. Elias Mountains, 7 miles southwest of Mount Hay, trends east into the Grand Pacific Pass area of British Columbia, and then southeast to the head of Tarr Inlet at Alaska-Canada boundary, 68 miles west of Skagway.

National Park Service Information

In 2004 Grand Pacific Glacier was about wide at the terminus, averaging about high at the ice face, up to deep at the waterline and over long. Much of the ice margin was then grounded at low tide; the calving section probably reached a water depth of only. The ice cliff was estimated to be high where it was grounded, but about and up to high where it calved into Tarr Inlet. Behind the terminus, the ice may thicken to or more. The western two thirds of the ice in the terminus of the Grand Pacific Glacier originate from the tributary Ferris Glacier, and flowed about per year or about per day. This latter estimate was based on measurements of aerial photographs taken between 1988 and 1990 and may be
higher than 2004 rates based on the fact that the ice had been thinning over the last 7 years or so. The eastern portion of Grand
Pacific Glacier moved only about per year based on GPS measurements made by the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory in 1998–1999. It had advanced at a rate of about per year for the last several decades, but it reached a maximum position when it joined Margerie Glacier around 1992. In 2004 those glaciers were no longer together due to recession of the Grand Pacific margin. A small stream flowed between the two termini. The eastern edge was then receding at about per year and showed significant thinning and closure of crevasses. In about 1996, an embayment began to form in the center of Grand Pacific's terminus. Since then, the center of the ice cliff began to calve more rapidly and was slowly receding at perhaps or less per year. In 2004 the CRREL anticipated that retreat would accelerate as the embayment enlarged and the depth at the waterline increased. In such a scenario, retreat was likely to continue until the terminus reaches a position where it will become grounded above mean tide. The grounded western edge of the glacier was also slowing receding and thinning. Rock debris from landslides and medial moraines cover much of this side of the glacier and extends across almost two-thirds of the ice face. Where this rock debris is more than an inch thick, it insulates the ice, slows melting and results in a thicker ice mass than where the ice is clean. In many areas on the glacier, the debris is more than thick.