<SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>
<h2 align="center">Chapter VIII</h2>
<h2 align="center">Exploration of the Stickeen Glaciers</h2>
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<p>Next day I planned an excursion to the so-called Dirt Glacier, the
most interesting to Indians and steamer men of all the Stickeen
glaciers from its mysterious floods. I left the steamer Gertrude for
the glacier delta an hour or two before sunset. The captain kindly
loaned me his canoe and two of his Indian deck hands, who seemed much
puzzled to know what the rare service required of them might mean, and
on leaving bade a merry adieu to their companions. We camped on the
west side of the river opposite the front of the glacier, in a
spacious valley surrounded by snowy mountains. Thirteen small glaciers
were in sight and four waterfalls. It was a fine, serene evening, and
the highest peaks were wearing turbans of flossy, gossamer
cloud-stuff. I had my supper before leaving the steamer, so I had only
to make a campfire, spread my blanket, and lie down. The Indians had
their own bedding and lay beside their own fire.</p>
<p>The Dirt Glacier is noted among the river men as being subject to
violent flood outbursts once or twice a year, usually in the late
summer. The delta of this glacier stream is three or four miles wide
where it fronts the river, and the many rough channels with which it
is guttered and the uprooted trees and huge boulders that roughen its
surface manifest the power of the floods that swept them to their
places; but <!-- Page 98 --> under ordinary conditions the glacier
discharges its drainage water into the river through only four or five
of the delta-channels.</p>
<p>Our camp was made on the south or lower side of the delta, below
all the draining streams, so that I would not have to ford any of them
on my way to the glacier. The Indians chose a sand-pit to sleep in; I
chose a level spot back of a drift log. I had but little to say to my
companions as they could speak no English, nor I much Thlinkit or
Chinook. In a few minutes after landing they retired to their pit and
were soon asleep and asnore. I lingered by the fire until after ten
o'clock, for the night sky was clear, and the great white mountains in
the starlight seemed nearer than by day and to be looking down like
guardians of the valley, while the waterfalls, and the torrents
escaping from beneath the big glacier, roared in a broad, low
monotone, sounding as if close at hand, though, as it proved next day,
the nearest was three miles away. After wrapping myself in my
blankets, I still gazed into the marvelous sky and made out to sleep
only about two hours. Then, without waking the noisy sleepers, I
arose, ate a piece of bread, and set out in my shirt-sleeves,
determined to make the most of the time at my disposal. The captain
was to pick us up about noon at a woodpile about a mile from here; but
if in the mean time the steamer should run aground and he should need
his canoe, a three whistle signal would be given.</p>
<p>Following a dry channel for about a mile, I came suddenly upon the
main outlet of the glacier, which <!-- Page 99 -->
in the imperfect light seemed as large as the river, about one hundred
and fifty feet wide, and perhaps three or four feet deep. A little
farther up it was only about fifty feet wide and rushing on with
impetuous roaring force in its rocky channel, sweeping forward sand,
gravel, cobblestones, and boulders, the bump and rumble sounds of the
largest of these rolling stones being readily heard in the midst of
the roaring. It was too swift and rough to ford, and no bridge tree
could be found, for the great floods had cleared everything out of
their way. I was therefore compelled to keep on up the right bank,
however difficult the way. Where a strip of bare boulders lined the
margin, the walking was easy, but where the current swept close along
the ragged edge of the forest, progress was difficult and slow on
account of snow-crinkled and interlaced thickets of alder and willow,
reinforced with fallen trees and thorny devil's-club (<i>Echinopanax
horridum</i>), making a jungle all but impenetrable. The mile of this
extravagantly difficult growth through which I struggled, inch by
inch, will not soon be forgotten. At length arriving within a few
hundred yards of the glacier, full of panax barbs, I found that both
the glacier and its unfordable stream were pressing hard against a
shelving cliff, dangerously steep, leaving no margin, and compelling
me to scramble along its face before I could get on to the glacier.
But by sunrise all these cliff, jungle, and torrent troubles were
overcome and I gladly found myself free on the magnificent
ice-river.</p>
<p>The curving, out-bulging front of the glacier is <!-- Page 100 -->
about two miles wide, two hundred feet high, and its surface for a
mile or so above the front is strewn with moraine detritus, giving it
a strangely dirty, dusky look, hence its name, the “Dirt
Glacier,” this detritus-laden portion being all that is seen in
passing up the river. A mile or two beyond the moraine-covered part I
was surprised to find alpine plants growing on the ice, fresh and
green, some of them in full flower. These curious glacier gardens, the
first I had seen, were evidently planted by snow avalanches from the
high walls. They were well watered, of course, by the melting surface
of the ice and fairly well nourished by humus still attached to the
roots, and in some places formed beds of considerable thickness.
Seedling trees and bushes also were growing among the flowers.
Admiring these novel floating gardens, I struck out for the middle of
the pure white glacier, where the ice seemed smoother, and then held
straight on for about eight miles, where I reluctantly turned back to
meet the steamer, greatly regretting that I had not brought a week's
supply of hardtack to allow me to explore the glacier to its head, and
then trust to some passing canoe to take me down to Buck Station, from
which I could explore the Big Stickeen Glacier.</p>
<p>Altogether, I saw about fifteen or sixteen miles of the main trunk.
The grade is almost regular, and the walls on either hand are about
from two to three thousand feet high, sculptured like those of
Yosemite Valley. I found no difficulty of an extraordinary kind. Many
a crevasse had to be crossed, but most of them were narrow and easily
jumped, while the few wide <!-- Page 101 --> ones that lay in my way
were crossed on sliver bridges or avoided by passing around them. The
structure of the glacier was strikingly revealed on its melting
surface. It is made up of thin vertical or inclined sheets or slabs
set on edge and welded together. They represent, I think, the
successive snowfalls from heavy storms on the tributaries. One of the
tributaries on the right side, about three miles above the front, has
been entirely melted off from the trunk and has receded two or three
miles, forming an independent glacier. Across the mouth of this
abandoned part of its channel the main glacier flows, forming a dam
which gives rise to a lake. On the head of the detached tributary
there are some five or six small residual glaciers, the drainage of
which, with that of the snowy mountain slopes above them, discharges
into the lake, whose outlet is through a channel or channels beneath
the damming glacier. Now these sub-channels are occasionally blocked
and the water rises until it flows alongside of the glacier, but as
the dam is a moving one, a grand outburst is sometimes made, which,
draining the large lake, produces a flood of amazing power, sweeping
down immense quantities of moraine material and raising the river all
the way down to its mouth, so that several trips may occasionally be
made by the steamers after the season of low water has laid them up
for the year. The occurrence of these floods are, of course, well
known to the Indians and steamboat men, though they know nothing of
their cause. They simply remark, “The Dirt Glacier has broken
out again.”</p>
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<p>I greatly enjoyed my walk up this majestic ice-river, charmed by
the pale-blue, ineffably fine light in the crevasses, moulins, and
wells, and the innumerable azure pools in basins of azure ice, and the
network of surface streams, large and small, gliding, swirling with
wonderful grace of motion in their frictionless channels, calling
forth devout admiration at almost every step and filling the mind with
a sense of Nature's endless beauty and power. Looking ahead from the
middle of the glacier, you see the broad white flood, though
apparently rigid as iron, sweeping in graceful curves between its high
mountain-like walls, small glaciers hanging in the hollows on either
side, and snow in every form above them, and the great down-plunging
granite buttresses and headlands of the walls marvelous in bold
massive sculpture; forests in side cañons to within fifty feet
of the glacier; avalanche pathways overgrown with alder and willow;
innumerable cascades keeping up a solemn harmony of water sounds
blending with those of the glacier moulins and rills; and as far as
the eye can reach, tributary glaciers at short intervals silently
descending from their high, white fountains to swell the grand central
ice-river.</p>
<p>In the angle formed by the main glacier and the lake that gives
rise to the river floods, there is a massive granite dome sparsely
feathered with trees, and just beyond this yosemitic rock is a
mountain, perhaps ten thousand feet high, laden with ice and snow
which seemed pure pearly white in the morning light. Last evening as
seen from camp it was adorned with a <!-- Page 103 --> cloud streamer,
and both the streamer and the peak were flushed in the alpenglow. A
mile or two above this mountain, on the opposite side of the glacier,
there is a rock like the Yosemite Sentinel; and in general all the
wall rocks as far as I saw them are more or less yosemitic in form and
color and streaked with cascades.</p>
<p>But wonderful as this noble ice-river is in size and depth and in
power displayed, far more wonderful was the vastly greater glacier
three or four thousand feet, or perhaps a mile, in depth, whose size
and general history is inscribed on the sides of the walls and over
the tops of the rocks in characters which have not yet been greatly
dimmed by the weather. Comparing its present size with that when it
was in its prime, is like comparing a small rivulet to the same stream
when it is a roaring torrent.</p>
<p>The return trip to the camp past the shelving cliff and through the
weary devil's-club jungle was made in a few hours. The Indians had
gone off picking berries, but were on the watch for me and hailed me
as I approached. The captain had called for me, and, after waiting
three hours, departed for Wrangell without leaving any food, to make
sure, I suppose, of a quick return of his Indians and canoe. This was
no serious matter, however, for the swift current swept us down to
Buck Station, some thirty-five miles distant, by eight o'clock. Here I
remained to study the “Big Stickeen Glacier,” but the
Indians set out for Wrangell soon after supper, though I invited them
to stay till morning.</p>
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<p>The weather that morning, August 27, was dark and rainy, and I
tried to persuade myself that I ought to rest a day before setting out
on new ice work. But just across the river the “Big
Glacier” was staring me in the face, pouring its majestic flood
through a broad mountain gateway and expanding in the spacious river
valley to a width of four or five miles, while dim in the gray
distance loomed its high mountain fountains. So grand an invitation
displayed in characters so telling was of course irresistible, and
body-care and weather-care vanished.</p>
<p>Mr. Choquette, the keeper of the station, ferried me across the
river, and I spent the day in getting general views and planning the
work that had been long in mind. I first traced the broad, complicated
terminal moraine to its southern extremity, climbed up the west side
along the lateral moraine three or four miles, making my way now on
the glacier, now on the moraine-covered bank, and now compelled to
climb up through the timber and brush in order to pass some rocky
headland, until I reached a point commanding a good general view of
the lower end of the glacier. Heavy, blotting rain then began to fall,
and I retraced my steps, oftentimes stopping to admire the blue
ice-caves into which glad, rejoicing streams from the mountain-side
were hurrying as if going home, while the glacier seemed to open wide
its crystal gateways to welcome them.</p>
<p>The following morning blotting rain was still falling, but time and
work was too precious to mind it. Kind Mr. Choquette put me across the
river in a canoe, <!-- Page 105 --> with a lot of biscuits his Indian
wife had baked for me and some dried salmon, a little sugar and tea, a
blanket, and a piece of light sheeting for shelter from rain during
the night, all rolled into one bundle.</p>
<p>“When shall I expect you back?” inquired Choquette,
when I bade him good-bye.</p>
<p>“Oh, any time,” I replied. “I shall see as much
as possible of the glacier, and I know not how long it will hold
me.”</p>
<p>“Well, but when will I come to look for you, if anything
happens? Where are you going to try to go? Years ago Russian officers
from Sitka went up the glacier from here and none ever returned. It's
a mighty dangerous glacier, all full of damn deep holes and cracks.
You've no idea what ticklish deceiving traps are scattered over
it.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I have,” I said. “I have seen glaciers
before, though none so big as this one. Do not look for me until I
make my appearance on the river-bank. Never mind me. I am used to
caring for myself.” And so, shouldering my bundle, I trudged off
through the moraine boulders and thickets.</p>
<p>My general plan was to trace the terminal moraine to its extreme
north end, pitch my little tent, leave the blanket and most of the
hardtack, and from this main camp go and come as hunger required or
allowed.</p>
<p>After examining a cross-section of the broad moraine, roughened by
concentric masses, marking interruptions in the recession of the
glacier of perhaps <!-- Page 106 --> several centuries, in which the
successive moraines were formed and shoved together in closer or wider
order, I traced the moraine to its northeastern extremity and ascended
the glacier for several miles along the left margin, then crossed it
at the grand cataract and down the right side to the river, and along
the moraine to the point of beginning.</p>
<p>On the older portions of this moraine I discovered several kettles
in process of formation and was pleased to find that they conformed in
the most striking way with the theory I had already been led to make
from observations on the old kettles which form so curious a feature
of the drift covering Wisconsin and Minnesota and some of the larger
moraines of the residual glaciers in the California Sierra. I found a
pit eight or ten feet deep with raw shifting sides countersunk
abruptly in the rough moraine material, and at the bottom, on sliding
down by the aid of a lithe spruce tree that was being undermined, I
discovered, after digging down a foot or two, that the bottom was
resting on a block of solid blue ice which had been buried in the
moraine perhaps a century or more, judging by the age of the tree that
had grown above it. Probably more than another century will be
required to complete the formation of this kettle by the slow melting
of the buried ice-block. The moraine material of course was falling in
as the ice melted, and the sides maintained an angle as steep as the
material would lie. All sorts of theories have been advanced for the
formation of these kettles, so abundant in the drift over a great part
of the United States, and I was glad <!-- Page 107 --> to be able to
set the question at rest, at least as far as I was concerned.</p>
<p>The glacier and the mountains about it are on so grand a scale and
so generally inaccessible in the ordinary sense, it seemed to matter
but little what course I pursued. Everything was full of interest,
even the weather, though about as unfavorable as possible for wide
views, and scrambling through the moraine jungle brush kept one as wet
as if all the way was beneath a cascade.</p>
<p>I pushed on, with many a rest and halt to admire the bold and
marvelously sculptured ice-front, looking all the grander and more
striking in the gray mist with all the rest of the glacier shut out,
until I came to a lake about two hundred yards wide and two miles long
with scores of small bergs floating in it, some aground, close inshore
against the moraine, the light playing on their angles and shimmering
in their blue caves in ravishing tones. This proved to be the largest
of the series of narrow lakelets that lie in shallow troughs between
the moraine and the glacier, a miniature Arctic Ocean, its ice-cliffs
played upon by whispering, rippling waveless and its small berg floes
drifting in its currents or with the wind, or stranded here and there
along its rocky moraine shore.</p>
<p>Hundreds of small rills and good-sized streams were falling into
the lake from the glacier, singing in low tones, some of them pouring
in sheer falls over blue cliffs from narrow ice-valleys, some spouting
from pipelike channels in the solid front of the glacier, others
gurgling out of arched openings at the base. All <!-- Page 108 -->
these water-streams were riding on the parent ice-stream, their voices
joined in one grand anthem telling the wonders of their near and
far-off fountains. The lake itself is resting in a basin of ice, and
the forested moraine, though seemingly cut off from the glacier and
probably more than a century old, is in great part resting on buried
ice left behind as the glacier receded, and melting slowly on account
of the protection afforded by the moraine detritus, which keeps
shifting and falling on the inner face long after it is overgrown with
lichens, mosses, grasses, bushes, and even good-sized trees; these
changes going on with marvelous deliberation until in fullness of time
the whole moraine settles down upon its bedrock foundation.</p>
<p>The outlet of the lake is a large stream, almost a river in size,
one of the main draining streams of the glacier. I attempted to ford
it where it begins to break in rapids in passing over the moraine, but
found it too deep and rough on the bottom. I then tried to ford at its
head, where it is wider and glides smoothly out of the lake, bracing
myself against the current with a pole, but found it too deep, and
when the icy water reached my shoulders I cautiously struggled back to
the moraine. I next followed it down through the rocky jungle to a
place where in breaking across the moraine dam it was only about
thirty-five feet wide. Here I found a spruce tree which I felled for a
bridge; it reached across, about ten feet of the top holding in the
bank brush. But the force of the torrent, acting on the submerged
branches <!-- Page 109 --> and the slender end of the trunk, bent it
like a bow and made it very unsteady, and after testing it by going
out about a third of the way over, it seemed likely to be carried away
when bent deeper into the current by my weight. Fortunately, I
discovered another larger tree well situated a little farther down,
which I felled, and though a few feet in the middle was submerged, it
seemed perfectly safe.</p>
<p>As it was now getting late, I started back to the lakeside where I
had left my bundle, and in trying to hold a direct course found the
interlaced jungle still more difficult than it was along the bank of
the torrent. For over an hour I had to creep and struggle close to the
rocky ground like a fly in a spider-web without being able to obtain a
single glimpse of any guiding feature of the landscape. Finding a
little willow taller than the surrounding alders, I climbed it, caught
sight of the glacier-front, took a compass bearing, and sunk again
into the dripping, blinding maze of brush, and at length emerged on
the lake-shore seven hours after leaving it, all this time as wet as
though I had been swimming, thus completing a trying day's work. But
everything was deliciously fresh, and I found new and old plant
friends, and lessons on Nature's Alaska moraine landscape-gardening
that made everything bright and light.</p>
<p>It was now near dark, and I made haste to make up my flimsy little
tent. The ground was desperately rocky. I made out, however, to level
down a strip large enough to lie on, and by means of slim alder stems
bent over it and tied together soon had a home. <!-- Page 110 -->
While thus busily engaged I was startled by a thundering roar across
the lake. Running to the top of the moraine, I discovered that the
tremendous noise was only the outcry of a newborn berg about fifty or
sixty feet in diameter, rocking and wallowing in the waves it had
raised as if enjoying its freedom after its long grinding work as part
of the glacier. After this fine last lesson I managed to make a small
fire out of wet twigs, got a cup of tea, stripped off my dripping
clothing, wrapped myself in a blanket and lay brooding on the gains of
the day and plans for the morrow, glad, rich, and almost
comfortable.</p>
<p>It was raining hard when I awoke, but I made up my mind to
disregard the weather, put on my dripping clothing, glad to know it
was fresh and clean; ate biscuits and a piece of dried salmon without
attempting to make a tea fire; filled a bag with hardtack, slung it
over my shoulder, and with my indispensable ice-axe plunged once more
into the dripping jungle. I found my bridge holding bravely in place
against the swollen torrent, crossed it and beat my way around pools
and logs and through two hours of tangle back to the moraine on the
north side of the outlet,--a wet, weary battle but not without
enjoyment. The smell of the washed ground and vegetation made every
breath a pleasure, and I found <i>Calypso borealis</i>, the first I
had seen on this side of the continent, one of my darlings, worth any
amount of hardship; and I saw one of my Douglas squirrels on the
margin of a grassy pool. The drip of the rain on the various leaves
was pleasant to hear. More especially marked were <!-- Page 111 -->
the flat low-toned bumps and splashes of large drops from the trees on
the broad horizontal leaves of <i>Echinopanax horridum</i>, like the
drumming of thundershower drops on veratrum and palm leaves, while the
mosses were indescribably beautiful, so fresh, so bright, so cheerily
green, and all so low and calm and silent, however heavy and wild the
wind and the rain blowing and pouring above them. Surely never a
particle of dust has touched leaf or crown of all these blessed
mosses; and how bright were the red rims of the cladonia cups beside
them, and the fruit of the dwarf cornel! And the wet berries, Nature's
precious jewelry, how beautiful they were!--huckleberries with pale
bloom and a crystal drop on each; red and yellow salmon-berries, with
clusters of smaller drops; and the glittering, berry-like raindrops
adorning the interlacing arches of bent grasses and sedges around the
edges of the pools, every drop a mirror with all the landscape in it.
A' that and a' that and twice as muckle's a' that in this glorious
Alaska day, recalling, however different, George Herbert's
“Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright.”</p>
<p>In the gardens and forests of this wonderful moraine one might
spend a whole joyful life.</p>
<p>When I at last reached the end of the great moraine and the front
of the mountain that forms the north side of the glacier basin, I
tried to make my way along its side, but, finding the climbing tedious
and difficult, took to the glacier and fared well, though a good deal
of step-cutting was required on its ragged, crevassed margin. When
night was drawing nigh, I scanned the <!-- Page 112 --> steep
mountainside in search of an accessible bench, however narrow, where a
bed and a fire might be gathered for a camp. About dark great was my
delight to find a little shelf with a few small mountain hemlocks
growing in cleavage joints. Projecting knobs below it enabled me to
build a platform for a fireplace and a bed, and by industrious
creeping from one fissure to another, cutting bushes and small trees
and sliding them down to within reach of my rock-shelf, I made out to
collect wood enough to last through the night. In an hour or two I had
a cheery fire, and spent the night in turning from side to side,
steaming and drying after being wet two days and a night. Fortunately
this night it did not rain, but it was very cold.</p>
<p>Pushing on next day, I climbed to the top of the glacier by
ice-steps and along its side to the grand cataract two miles wide
where the whole majestic flood of the glacier pours like a mighty
surging river down a steep declivity in its channel. After gazing a
long time on the glorious show, I discovered a place beneath the edge
of the cataract where it flows over a hard, resisting granite rib,
into which I crawled and enjoyed the novel and instructive view of a
glacier pouring over my head, showing not only its grinding, polishing
action, but how it breaks off large angular boulder-masses--a most
telling lesson in earth-sculpture, confirming many I had already
learned in the glacier basins of the High Sierra of California. I then
crossed to the south side, noting the forms of the huge blocks into
which the glacier was broken in <!-- Page 113 --> passing over the
brow of the cataract, and how they were welded.</p>
<p>The weather was now clear, opening views according to my own heart
far into the high snowy fountains. I saw what seemed the farthest
mountains, perhaps thirty miles from the front, everywhere
winter-bound, but thick forested, however steep, for a distance of at
least fifteen miles from the front, the trees, hemlock and spruce,
clinging to the rock by root-holds among cleavage joints. The greatest
discovery was in methods of denudation displayed beneath the
glacier.</p>
<p>After a few more days of exhilarating study I returned to the
river-bank opposite Choquette's landing. Promptly at sight of the
signal I made, the kind Frenchman came across for me in his canoe. At
his house I enjoyed a rest while writing out notes; then examined the
smaller glacier fronting the one I had been exploring, until a passing
canoe bound for Fort Wrangell took me aboard.</p>
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