Glaciers form when more snow accumulates than can melt away over a long
period of time. As snow continues to accumulate, year after year, the lower layers
are compressed into very thick ice. From a distance, glacial ice has a characteristic
bluish color. There are 25 named glaciers and numerous small, unnamed glaciers
and ice patches on the slopes of Mount Rainier. The total volume of ice and snow
on Mount Rainier has been estimated at about 1 cubic mile. It has as much snow
and ice on its slopes as all of the other Cascade volcanoes combined!
What is the difference between glaciers and snowfields? Glaciers are gradually
being pulled downhill by the force of gravity. On Mount Rainier, the glaciers flow
down the sides of the mountain, melting at the lower ends while more snow
accumulates at the upper ends. Snowfields, on the other hand, melt on warm days
and grow larger during snowy winters, but they do not flow downhill. They may sit
on flat areas, or they may be surrounded by ridges or hills that hold them in place.
Glaciers advance (grow in size) or retreat (shrink in size) in response to changes in
climate over a period of several years. Glacier size, thickness, and length can be
sensitive indicators of climate change. The Nisqually Glacier on Mount Rainier has
been studied since 1918, when scientists began to measure the position of its
terminus, or lowest part. This is the longest record of study on any glacier in the
Western hemisphere. In 1931, scientists began to take measurements to determine
the glacier's thickness.
The glaciers on Mount Rainier are the sources of five major river systems:
Nisqually, Cowlitz, White, Carbon, and Puyallup. These rivers provide water for
plants, animals, and humans throughout western Washington. When you visit
Mount Rainier National Park, look for these rivers and notice how muddy they
look. The mud they carry is finely ground rock scratched by moving glaciers from
the shoulders of Mount Rainier.
Glacier Facts
Mount Rainier's elevation:
14,410 feet
Number of named glaciers on
Mount Rainier: 25
Glaciers that start at the summit:
Emmons, Nisqually, Winthrop,
Tahoma, Ingraham
Area covered by permanent
snow: 22,747 acres (glaciers and
snow patches)
Longest and thickest glacier on
Mount Rainier: Carbon Glacier,
5.7 miles long and 700 feet thick.
Its 3500 foot elevation terminus is
the lowert of any glacier in the
Unitied States.
Fastest measured movement
downhill for a Mount Rainier
glacier: Nisqually Glacier, 29
inches per day
Largest surface area of any
glacier in the contiguous United
States: Emmons Glacier (4.3
square miles)
Watersheds fed by streams
running off Mount Rainier: 9
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