I'm gonna go down the list of Alaskan glaciers on Wikipedia and post them here! (Or at least the ones I can find haha)
Barnard Glacier, in the St. Elias Mountains *drools at its moraine*
Bering Glacier..or part of it in Wrangel-St. Elias National Park
Some guy at Brady Glacier at Glacier Bay
Carroll Glacier at Glacier Bay..oooh
Chenega Glacier, Prince William Sound
Clark Glacier, Glacier Bay (now look at THAT scenery)
Columbia Glacier, Prince William Sound
Davidson Glacier, near Haines
Exit Glacier, Kenai Mountains (duuuuuude...)
Grand Pacific Glacier, Glacier Bay (haha wow look how dirty it is)
Grewingk Glacier, Chugach Mountains
Guyot Glacier, Robinson Mountains
Harvard Glacier, Prince William Sound (look it its moraines!!)
Hubbard Glacier, Disenchantment Bay. It's the longest tidewater glacier in Alaska. It's advancing and the ice at the front of it is 400 years old
John Hopkins Glacier, Glacier Bay
Kahiltna Glacier, Mount McKinley
Kennicott Glacier, Wrangell Mountains
Lamplugh Glacier, Glacier Bay
LeConte Glacier, LeConte Bay
Logan Glacier, Yukon-US boundary
Malaspina Glacier, St. Elias Mountains (duuuude!!)
This is the MARGERIE Glacier, at GLACIER BAY. Heeee ;)
Matanuska Glacier, Glenn Highway. It expands about a foot a day! (It's probably destroying the forest too..)
Meares Glacier, Prince William Sound
Mendenhall Glacier, Juneau
Miles Glacier, Miles Lake
Muir Glacier, Glacier Bay
Nabesna Glacier, Wrangell Mountains. It's the longest valley glacier in North America (75 miles long!)
Portage Glacier, Kenai Peninsula
Reid Glacier, Glacier Bay
Riggs Glacier, Glacier Bay
Ruth Glacier of course!
Taku Glacier, near Juneau
Tazlina Glacier, Chugach Mountains
Tutstumena Glacier, Kenai Peninsula
Varigated Glacier, Russel Fjord
Yahtse Glacier, Icy Bay
Yale Glacier, College Fjord
This one wasn't on the list but I knew about it sooo..Childs Glacier, Chugach National Forest
Pic of the day:
Another mountain lake haha. Dad went swimming! Brrrr
Aurora borealis: The Latin name for the northern lights, the dancing, dazzling display in the northern sky, most easily seen from October throughout April. The aurora is a massive electrical discharge thought to be caused by solar wind hitting earth's magnetic field