Bowdoin Glacier
Bowdoin Glacier (Danish: Bowdoin Gletscher or Bowdoin Brae), is a glacier in northwestern Greenland.[2] Administratively it belongs to the Avannaata municipality.
Bowdoin Glacier | |
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Bowdoin Gletscher | |
View of the Bowdoin Glacier | |
Location within Greenland | |
Type | Tidal outlet glacier |
Location | Greenland |
Coordinates | 77°43′N 68°32′W |
Width | 3 km (1.9 mi) |
Terminus | Bowdoin Fjord Inglefield Fjord Baffin Bay |
Status | Retreating[1] |
Like the fjord further south, this glacier was named by Robert Peary after Bowdoin College. He described the glacier as follows:
Beyond that, an isolated mountain of striking boldness and sharpness of outline jutted into the air apparently some two thousand feet, and then, from its base, the crystal wall of a great glacier stretched clear across the opposite side of the bay head. This glacier I named, in honour of my Alma Mater, Bowdoin Glacier, and the bay I called Bowdoin Bay.[3]
Geography
The Bowdoin Glacier discharges at the head of the Bowdoin Fjord from the Greenland Ice Sheet to the northeast of Prudhoe Land.[4][1]
The glacier flows roughly from NE to SW.[5]
See also
References
- The recent regimen of the ice cap margin in North Greenland
- "Bowdoin Gletscher". Mapcarta. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
- Robert E. Peary, Northward over the Great Ice, - a narrative of life and work along the shores and upon the interior ice-cap of northern Greenland in the years 1886 and 1891-1897, with a description of the little tribe pp. 393--394
- Ice front and flow speed variations of marine-terminating outlet glaciers along the coast of Prudhoe Land, northwestern Greenland
- Google Earth
External links
- Media related to Bowdoin Glacier at Wikimedia Commons
- Identifying Spatial Variability in Greenland's Outlet Glacier Response to Ocean Heat