Abstract

Hubbard Glacier advanced across the entrance of Russell Fiord in May 1986, transforming the fiord into a lake, which began filling with fresh water. The dam failed in October 1986. The calving terminus of Hubbard Glacier has been mapped with increasing frequency for nearly a century. A mapping interval of a few years establishes that the terminus has made a slow, but accelerating, advance. Recently the terminus has been mapped several times per month using vertical photography, ground surveys, and time-lapse cameras. At this frequency of observation, the terminus position is found to fluctuate seasonally. These seasonal fluctuations are compared with those of Columbia Glacier, where a longer detailed record is available. Although Columbia Glacier is now undergoing a drastic retreat, it continues to have seasonal length changes similar to those it experienced before the retreat began. The lengths of both Columbia and Hubbard Glaciers are extended in the spring, and retracted in the fall. The relatively long period of record for Columbia Glacier shows consistent seasonal variation in length and, when compared with the short period of record for Hubbard Glacier, suggests that there are consistent seasonal differences in length at Hubbard also. The lower Hubbard Glacier diverges, feeding ice into Disenchantment Bay and Russell Fiord, and advances and retreats synchronously over most of its width. The tidal current, which passes through the 250–500 m wide entrance to Russell Fiord, does not affect the seasonal advance and retreat in that area significantly.

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