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GLACIER BAY NATIONAL
PARK
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The highest concentration of tidewater glaciers on the planet can be found
at Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve. Access to this natural wonderland
is extremely limited and not all cruiselines can offer this highlight. But
as a leader in the business, Princess is proud to include Glacier Bay on
every one of our exclusive Gulf of Alaska cruises and cruisetours.
Spread across an
impressive 3.3 million acres in southeastern Alaska, this treasure trove of
scenic coastal islands, narrow fjords and substantial wildlife offers an
inspirational glimpse of what Mother Nature does best.
"MORNING OF CREATION"
When John Muir discovered Glacier Bay in 1879, he surveyed the unblemished
panorama and declared it "still in the morning of creation." Muir wasn't the
first explorer to be in the area. Nearly a century earlier, George
Vancouver's ships sailed right past it because a wall of ice sealed off the
entrance to the bay. But over the last 200 years, the ice has been steadily
receding, revealing a stark landscape that's slowly being taken over by
vegetation that can't resist the fresh rock and soil. The result is a lush,
temperate rainforest of spruces and hemlocks that carpets large portions of
the stunning terrain.
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TARR INLET
At the head of Glacier Bay is the Tarr Inlet, where scientists have found
exposed rock that's believed to be more than 200 million years old. The Tarr
Inlet is home to the Grand Pacific Glacier, an active body of ice that's
slowly making its way toward the Margerie Glacier, which it last touched in
1912. |
JOHNS HOPKINS INLET
As you cruise by the northeastern edge of the robust Fairweather Range,
you'll enter the Johns Hopkins Inlet, home to no less than nine glaciers.
Framed by rocky slopes that stretch skyward more than 6,000 feet, these
wondrous bodies are eclipsed only by the mighty Mount Fairweather itself,
which at more than 15,300 feet is the highest point in southeast Alaska.
BRILLIANT BLUE GLOW
In the northeastern corner of Glacier Bay, the snow-covered Takhinsha
Mountains feed the active Muir Glacier, which regularly sheds walls of ice
into the bay. The brilliant blue glow of a calving glacier and the
thunderous roar of ice crashing into the water below are sights and sounds
that you'll remember for the rest of your life.
With such a diverse landscape, the park provides a variety of habitats for
animals, big and small. Large colonies of seabirds, migrating ducks and
geese, black bears, seals, sea lions, porpoises and whales are all common
here.
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