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Glacier Bay National Park and PreserveLupine blooming near Bartlett Cove
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Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve
History & Culture
 
The Muir Glacier filled the entire eastern arm of Glacier Bay in 1893.
The Muir Glacier filled the entire eastern arm of Glacier Bay in 1893.
 
Culturally Modified Tree Report
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Long before the present national park, the Huna Tlingit people lived in Glacier Bay. Among the evidence of their traditional activities are trees that were stripped of their bark for a variety of uses. You can read more about these trees, which are still growing around the lagoon in Bartlett Cove, by clicking on the picture. 

 
Glacier Bay Historic Resource Study
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Read more about the European exploration, early tourism development, homesteading and other activities in and near what is now Glacier Bay National Park.

 
Cooper's History of Glacier Bay National Monument
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Pioneer ecologist William S. Cooper of the University of Minnesota conducted studies of plant succession beginning in 1916, and was instrumental in the move to have the area protected. Here you can read Dr. Cooper’s first-person account of his intensive lobbying effort, which met many obstacles but was ultimately successful. Cooper also details his losing fight to prohibit mining in the newly created national monument.
Human History timeline
Glacier Bay Human History
Timeline of historical events
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Glacier Bay as Homeland
Glacier Bay as Homeland
The essence of life for the Hoonah Tlingit
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Glacier Bay Administrative History
Land Reborn
Glacier Bay NP Administrative History
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History of the National Park Service
The NPS has a proud past
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Merlin  

Did You Know?
Merlins often make their homes in the abandoned nests of crows and ravens. Young male merlins, a year old, have been known to assist an adult pair with nesting duties.

Last Updated: April 30, 2009 at 15:53 EST