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Wolverine Glacier,
Alaska
Program Overview/Why Study Wolverine Glacier?
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Wolverine Glacier,
Sept. 10, 2003.
Photo by Rod March. (click on image for enlargement, 108 KB.) |
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) operates a long-term program to monitor climate,
glacier motion, glacier mass balance, and stream runoff. The data collected are used to
understand glacier-related hydrologic processes and improve the quantitative prediction of
water resources, glacier-related hazards, and the consequences of climate change (Fountain and others, 1997). The approach has been
to establish long-term mass balance monitoring programs at three widely spaced glacier
basins in the United States that clearly sample different climate-glacier-runoff regimes.
Wolverine Glacier is one of these three long-term, high quality mass balance monitoring
sites operated by the USGS. The other monitoring sites are Gulkana Glacier in central
Alaska and South Cascade Glacier in
Washington.
Data
Google Earth View
If you have Google Earth
installed, load view of Wolverine Glacier
here)
Educational Resources
Common questions and myths about glaciers
Glacier Power, An Earth Sciences Curriculum
Element, by Donna Sandberg,
Alaska Synthetic Aperture Radar Facility (ASF), Geophysical Institute,
University of Alaska Fairbanks
Glaciers in the News
(most recent article Dec. 30, 1999)
All
About Glaciers from the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
Still have
questions? Ask a glaciologist via email
Maintainer: Rod March
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Last update:
Wednesday, January 03, 2007 12:46 PM
URL: http://ak.water.usgs.gov/glaciology/wolverine/index.html |