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Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center

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Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center
Phone:
+1 907-789-0097

Hours:
Sunday10am - 4pm
MondayClosed
TuesdayClosed
WednesdayClosed
ThursdayClosed
Friday10am - 4pm
Saturday10am - 4pm


Mendenhall Glacier is a glacier about 13.6 miles long located in Mendenhall Valley, about 12 miles from downtown Juneau in the southeast area of the U.S. state of Alaska. The glacier and surrounding landscape is protected as part of the 5,815 acres Mendenhall Glacier Recreation Area, a federally designated unit of the Tongass National Forest.The Juneau Icefield Research Program has monitored the outlet glaciers of the Juneau Icefield since 1942, including Mendenhall Glacier. The glacier has also retreated 1.75 miles since 1929, when Mendenhall Lake was created, and over 2.5 miles since 1500. The end of the glacier currently has a negative glacier mass balance and will continue to retreat in the foreseeable future.Given that average yearly temperatures are currently increasing, and the outlook is for this trend to continue, it is actually possible that the glacier might experience a period of stabilization or slight advance during its retreating march. This is because increasing amounts of warm, moist air will be carried up to the head of the icefield, where colder ambient temperatures will cause it to precipitate as snow. The increased amount of snow will feed the icefield, possibly enough to offset the continually increasing melting experienced at the glacier's terminus. However, this interesting phenomenon will fade away if temperatures continue to climb, since the head of the glacier will no longer have cold enough ambient temperatures to cause snow to precipitate.
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