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Bering Glacier in Alaska is Tracked by NASA Scientists and Satellites Greenbelt, Maryland (HDW) August 3, 2004
- Bering Glacier currently terminates in
Vitus Lake south of Alaska’s Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, about
10 km from the Gulf of Alaska. Combined with the Bagley Icefield, where
the snow that feeds the glacier accumulates, the Bering is the largest
glacier in North America. Warmer temperatures and changes in precipitation
over the past century have thinned the Bering Glacier by several hundred
meters. Since 1900 the terminus has retreated as much as 12 km. (The Bering
Glacier ‘surges,’ an acceleration of the flow rate of the
glacier, every 20 years or so. During these periods the glacier terminus
advances. The surges are generally followed by periods of retreat, so
despite the periodic advances the glacier has been shrinking overall.)
Most of the glaciers along the Alaskan coast are retreating along with
the Bering Glacier. |
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