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Glaciers of Alaska Information
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GLACIERS
OF ALASKA

(3
Credits)
GEO 385/585
SUMMER SESSION
JUNE 12 - JUNE 19, 2005
YOU NEED TO
SIGN UP BY FEBRUARY, 2005
This
course is a 7-day field study of glaciers in south central
Alaska. It includes an introduction to glacial processes
and land forms, and a viewing of different types of glaciers
including small cirque glaciers, valley glaciers, and glaciers
calving into lakes and tidewater. This trip will include
hiking! There will be hiking along the terminus of the
glacier and onto the ice itself to view ice structures and
modern glacial processes. For walking on glaciers, warm
clothes, daypacks, and hiking boots are required. Hiking
sticks are recommended for those who prefer more secure
footing.
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Day
1 –
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Will involve a trip along
the scenic Turnagain Arm fjord to Portage Lake and
a boat trip to the terminus of the iceberg-calving
Portage Glacier.
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Day
2 –
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A trip along the Seward
highway, considered the most scenic highway in Alaska,
to Exit Glacier. An all-day, 7-mile round trip, climb
along the right side of the glacier to the Harding
Icefield. The only trail in the world to visit an
ice field on foot. In the evening we will visit the
Alaska Sealife Research Center in Seward.
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Day
3 –
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The third day will be
a 6-hour boat trip out of Whittier to view fjords
and 23 tidewater glaciers in Prince William Sound
(College Fjords). Whittier was connected to Anchorage
in 2002 when the longest highway tunnel in North America
was completed. Thus, everything you see here will
be true Alaskan wilderness.
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Day
4 –
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The fourth day we will
drive 2 hours to Matanuska Glacier, which is one of
a few Alaskan glaciers accessible by car. A professional
guide will help lead you through a step-by-step approach
to the art and technical know-how of ice climbing
and glacier travel. We will then hike onto the mountain
of ice and learn about glaciology, geology, and the
natural history of the Matanuska Glacier.
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Day
5 –
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If weather makes this
possible, we will drive to the town of Talkeetna,
built to serve people aiming to climb Mount McKinley
in Denali National Park. We will fly with mountain
climbers in a small plane over Ruth Gorge, deepest
in the world and over the largest mountain glacier
in the world, and land on a glacier on Mount McKinley.
By doing Denali this way, we stand a better chance
of seeing the mountain than anyone else, and we avoid
the National Park school bus ride into the park and
have the pleasure of visiting a town with some character.
If the weather doesn’t cooperate, we will visit wetlands
and boreal forest sites around Anchorage, which will
include a study of moose, bear, and salmon, and visit
the Alaska Native Heritage Center in the afternoon.
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Day
6 –
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The last day will be
a boat trip with National Park personnel to Kenai
Fjords National Park. The Glacier-Wildlife cruise
includes the Aialik or Holgate Glacier and the Chiswell
Islands, a national wildlife refuge. The area includes
over 100 species of birds, seals, sea otters, sea
lions, puffins, and various species of orca and humpback
whales.
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We will stay
in dorm room units, which include 2 bedrooms that share
a bathroom in a new building at the University of Alaska
in Anchorage. Days will be long. We will leave the dorms
in Anchorage around 7:00 A.M., and for all 6 days, allow
for late returns to the dorm. Remember the sun is visible
for 20 hours a day at
this time of the year.
Approximate
cost, if we do everything, will be $1,500, which will include
everything: plane tickets, boat tickets, dorm, van rental,
park fees. You will need to pay for food, although lunch
is included on our boat trips. If the plane trip to Mt.
McKinley is cancelled, you will get $200 back.
See Dr. Janke,
Mueller Hall, room 9, 464-5139, for further details and
to reserve a place for this course. Email Ronald
Janke.
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