Sunday, January 10, 2010

On the Glacier

One of the highlights of visiting Palmer Station is to hike up the local glacier that sits behind the research base. It's less than an hour's slow hike to the top, which offers commanding view of the harbor, nearby islands and mountains that rise up sharply from sea level.

It's a fairly easy hike, though the walk through the "backyard" right behind the station is a tad treacherous -- a rock-strewn maze of ankle-twisting debris. I came across a bizarre corpse of a what appears to be a brown skua. It's entire chest cavity empty, while it's head other extremities were still well preserved.

The glacier itself seems to be in poor shape. Long-time residents will tell you it's retreated mightily in the last couple of decades, and the face I walked was crusty, flaked with delicate ice crystals that easily dislodged and flew away in the wind, making a musical twinkling as they skipped across the irregular surface of ice. There were several skinny but long cracks that you could hear water running through, as if someone had left the faucet running underneath the ice.

A black flag line marks off the more unstable parts of the glacier, though I wonder how often that trail now moves. In recent years, it's not unusual for new islands to be discovered as the glacier retreats in other areas, revealing that what people had once thought were one stretch of land to in reality be split by open water.

A few pictures from the afternoon hike:


The view from the top of the glacier looking behind the station.


The resting place for a picked over skua skeleton.


A view of Palmer station, bottom left corner, and some nearby islands.


The recreational limit at Palmer Station.

2 comments:

  1. Wish I could have done that hike with you! Looks beautiful!!

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  2. Nice.. How long you going to be at Palmer?

    ReplyDelete