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Glacier National Park (U.S.)



         


Glacier
Designation National Park
Location Montana USA
Nearest Cities Great Falls, Montana
Lethbridge, Alberta
Latitude 37° 48° 48' N
Longitude 144° 114° 00' W
Area 1,013,572 acres
410,178 ha
Date of Establishment May 11, 1910
Visitation 1,864,822 (2002)
Governing Body National Park Service
IUCN category II (National Park)

Glacier National Park is a national park in Montana. It was established on May 11, 1910 by an act of the United States Congress. It contains over 1 million acres (4000 km²) of forest, mountains and lakes. It borders Waterton Lakes National Park in Canada and the two were designated an international peace park in 1932. They were both designated Biosphere Reserves in 1976 and World Heritage sites in 1995, jointly called the Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park.

The park contains numerous mountains, waterfalls, large and small lakes and a few small and rapidly melting glaciers. Triple Divide Peak is a mountain on the divide between the Pacific Ocean, Hudson Bay and Gulf of Mexico watersheds. Lake McDonald, Two Medicine Lake, St. Mary Lake and Lake Sherburne are large lakes while small tarns are located in cirques throughout the mountains. The north fork of the Flathead River forms the western boundary of the park.

There are about 50 small glaciers in the park. They range in size from the 1.74 km² Blackfoot Glacier to the 0.06 km² Gem Glacier. In total 27 km² of glaciers exist in the park in 2003. Other well-known glaciers include Grinnell Glacier, the Salamander and Jackson Glacier. There were 150 glaciers in the area of the future park in 1850. The larger glaciers are only 1/3 of their 1850 size and it is estimated that all the park's glaciers will have melted by 2030.

The Great Northern Railway completed a railroad through the area south of the park in 1891. In 1900 the park was designated a forest preserve; although, mining was still allowed, it was not commercially successful. In the 1910s, to promote tourism the railway built a series of hotels and backcountry houses on a Swiss chalet theme throughout the area. Vacationers could take horse trails between lodgings. Many of these are still in use today. The Great Northern Railway in developing its "American Alps" was following the example of the Northern Pacific Railway in Yellowstone and the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad at Grand Canyon.

Several large lakes have small wooden tour boats, some dating back to the 1920s. Going-to-the-Sun Road, completed in 1932, is the only road that crosses the park, going over the Continental Divide at Logan Pass. A fleet of 1930s red tour buses, rebuilt in 2001 to run on propane, offer tours on the road.

The park contains 700 miles (1100 km) of hiking trails as well as horse trails, but very limited bicycling.

The park is prime grizzly and black bear habitat and contains other large mammals such as mountain goats, mountain sheep, moose and elk.

Glacier is part of a large preserved ecosystem. Glacier Park borders the Blackfeet Indian Reservation, Flathead National Forest, Great Bear Wilderness, Lewis and Clark National Forest in the United States and Waterton Lakes National Park, Akamina-Kishinena Provincial Park and the

Grinnell Glacier and Lake Josephine

webcam streams)


Disambiguation: There is also a national park in Canada by the same name. See Glacier National Park (Canada).






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