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Alaska Glacier Cruises & Alaska Glacier Tours

Alaska Glacier Tours Overview     Prince William Sound Glacier Cruises    Kenai Fjords Glacier Cruises     Alaska Glacier Tours Photos     Alaska Glacier Tours Videos    
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Our advisors are a team of Alaska's top park rangers, wildlife biologist, bush pilots, naturalist, photographers, hoteliers, and other seasoned travel professionals sharing their best insights with you. Learn more about who we are»
 
  Know What to Look For
 
From a distance
Bullet image Arete Sharp, narrow ridges formed on a mountain by a glacier.
Bullet image Bergschrund The crevasse that separates the stagnant headwall ice from the flowing ice of the glacier. Many glaciological terms come from the Germans who first studied them.
Bullet image Calving Just as cows have calves, glaciers calve icebergs, chunks of ice that break off the glacier and fall into a sea, river, or lake, causing a thunderous roar, splash, and wave.
Arrow icon  Watch for calving at Child's Glacier near Cordova, or in Prince William Sound
Bullet image Crevasse An open crack in the glacier surface, sometimes gaping enough to swallow a person.
Bullet image Erratic A boulder swept down with an advancing glacier and deposited elsewhere as the glacier melted. The biggest erratics can weigh thousands of tons!
Bullet image Firn or Neve The area of glacier covered with snow throughout the year.
Bullet image Ice Fall Jumbled and broken ice which forms when a glacier flows over a steep drop-off.
Bullet image Kettle A very large block of ice, left behind as a glacier recedes, melts and forms either a pothole or, if filled with water, a lake.
Arrow icon  Mirror Lake just outside Anchorage is a kettle lake.
Bullet image Nunatak Mountain peaks or ridges which poke through the ice, forming islands within the glacier.
Bullet image Serac An isolated block of ice that juts straight up from the surface of a glacier, often hundreds of feet high.
Bullet image Outburst Flood or Jökulhlaup

A tremendous release of water that was trapped behind or beneath a glacier. When the ice finally breaks it often causes catastrophic flooding.
Arrow icon  Lake George, on the Knik Glacier, did this annually from 1918-1966, until the glacier receded

Up close
Bullet image Glacier Flour Very finely ground particles of rock, silt, or clay created by a glacier when its rock-filled ice scrapes over bedrock and which flow out from beneath a glacier in the meltwater.
Bullet image Glacier Silt The turquoise lakes you will see are colored by glacial silt suspended in the water. Glaciers scrape bedrock into fine, round particles of rock or clay which are then carried away by tides or rivers.
Arrow icon  Glacier flour colors lakes such as Portage Lake and Kenai Lake
Bullet image Ice Geyser or "Bubbling Pond" Flightseeing over glaciers south of McKinley, you may see fountains of glacial meltwater forcing their way up through the glacier's surface. These ice geysers can spurt refrigerator-sized chunks of ice ten feet into the air, or can bubble gently.
Arrow icon  Two of the most famous "bubbling ponds" are at the foot of the Ruth and Kanikula Glaciers
Bullet image Ice Quake When you hear the sound of muted thunder seeming to be miles away, it may be an ice quake, caused by ice shifting and grumbling inside the glacier. It can prompt calving.
Bullet image Ice Sizzle

As an iceberg melts, listen for a crackling or sizzling sound like soda pop or Rice Krispies! Ice sizzle is caused by the release of air bubbles trapped during the glacier's formation decades, or even centuries, ago.
Arrow icon  Listen at Portage Lake, from the ice that comes to shore
Arrow icon  Hear it all around in Prince William Sound

Bullet image Ice Worm The only worms known to inhabit snow and ice, they are brown-black and only about 3 millimeters long. They feed off red algae, which grow on glaciers, and burrow in ice to hibernate.
Bullet image Moulin (or Glacier Mill) Look for channels of water which plunge down holes or tubes deep into the bowels of the glacier-it can be a chilling experience. French for mill, a moulin is so named for the loud, roaring noise made by the falling water.
Bullet image Surge A short period when meltwater beneath the glacier causes it to slide up to 100 times faster than normal. Surges of 300 feet a day have been recorded in Southeast Alaska.
Bullet image Sun Cup The richly textured, cup-shaped depressions you will see on the surface of some glaciers are caused by sun or wind abrasion.
 
 
Need more Advice? Click on any of the questions below to get some genuine advice from Alaska Insiders
Arrow image Kenai Fjords vs. Prince William Sound
Arrow image 3 Ways to See Glaciers
Arrow image Alaska's Best Roadside Glaciers
Arrow image Whittier Tunnel Tips
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Travel Advice from Alaska Insiders
Arrow image Kenai Fjords vs. Prince William Sound
Arrow image 3 Ways to See Alaska Glaciers
Arrow image Alaska's Best Roadside Glaciers
Arrow image Whittier Tunnel Tips
Arrow image Know What to Look For on Your Glacier Tour
Meet the locals
Advisor image "Don't miss a cruise into Prince William Sound. People are out there with their mouths open. They've never seen anything like it-I don't care where they've gone."
Brad Philips,
Tourism pioneer, Former State Legislator, owns and operates Phillips 26 Glacier Cruise
Read More» Meet More Locals»
 
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