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  • 00:06

    Glacier Bay National Park is a 3.3 million acre US National Park that is located in southeast

  • 00:14

    Alaska, a bit west of Juneau.

  • 00:17

    Glacier Bay was formed by a large glacier that retreated 65 miles over the last 250

  • 00:24

    years -- creating a spectacular collection of inlets and breathtaking glaciers -- and

  • 00:31

    it can only be accessed by plane or boat.

  • 00:36

    According to the National Park Service, Glacier Bay National Park -- which should not be confused

  • 00:42

    with Glacier National Park in northwest Montana -- is home to 1,045 glaciers.

  • 00:50

    The longest glacier is Grand Pacific Glacier and the fastest moving glacier is Johns Hopkins

  • 00:57

    Glacier.

  • 00:59

    Both glaciers were part of our visit to Glacier Bay National Park while sailing the Holland

  • 01:05

    America Nieuw Amsterdam with our little JellyBean during our Alaskan cruise in late May of 2019.

  • 01:14

    Our visit to Glacier Bay National Park started at 6:30 am when Park Rangers boarded our cruise

  • 01:21

    ship while still at sea.

  • 01:25

    About an hour later, the rangers were available for questions and displays were setup that

  • 01:31

    included a “Typical Cruise Ship Route” with a detailed schedule of the day’s visit,

  • 01:38

    descriptions of wildlife that are common to the area, including a few sample furs,

  • 01:45

    the Glacier Bay National Park passport stamp,

  • 01:53

    and a large, three-dimensional map of the park.

  • 01:58

    By 8:00 am, our ship had travelled well into Glacier Bay and passengers were able to access

  • 02:04

    the bow.

  • 02:06

    The park rangers started providing commentary that could be heard in all of the ship’s

  • 02:10

    public areas and on the Forward Camera TV channel.

  • 02:16

    Reid Glacier was the first glacier we saw as the ship sailed toward Johns Hopkins Inlet.

  • 02:23

    The glacier is approximately nine and a half miles long, moves roughly south to north at

  • 02:29

    about one to three feet per day, and is about three-quarters of a mile wide and 130 feet

  • 02:36

    high at the face.

  • 02:38

    Reid Glacier is named for Harry Fielding Reid, an American geophysicist who studied the glaciers

  • 02:45

    of Glacier Bay in the 1890s.

  • 02:49

    Just past Reid Glacier -- at the entrance of Johns Hopkins Inlet -- is Lamplugh Glacier,

  • 02:56

    which is approximately 16 miles long and moves roughly south to north at about two to three

  • 03:02

    feet per day.

  • 03:04

    The glacier is about three-quarters of a mile wide and 160 feet high at the face and it

  • 03:10

    shares an icefield with Reid Glacier.

  • 03:15

    Lamplugh Glacier is named for George William Lamplugh, a noted British geologist who visited

  • 03:21

    Glacier Bay in 1884.

  • 03:25

    As our ship passed by, most passengers crowded the side railing to get a view of Lamplugh

  • 03:30

    Glacier, which left nearby Topeka Glacier in clear view straight ahead.

  • 03:37

    Topeka Glacier is located entirely on land and is approximately five miles long and a

  • 03:43

    quarter of a mile wide.

  • 03:46

    During our visit, we spotted a few bald eagles -- and a few harbor seals -- floating on the

  • 03:51

    ice in front of Topeka Glacier.

  • 04:02

    The Tarr Inlet Suture Zone was clearly visible as our ship rounded Jaw Point and sailed into

  • 04:08

    Johns Hopkins Inlet.

  • 04:11

    The formation consists of darker-colored metamorphic rock from the Chugach terrane and lighter-colored

  • 04:18

    granite from the Alexander terrane.

  • 04:22

    According to the National Park Service, the formation is considered one of the best views

  • 04:27

    of an arc-forearc boundary on the planet.

  • 04:32

    Johns Hopkins Glacier is located at the end of Johns Hopkins Inlet and is one of the few

  • 04:39

    advancing tidewater glaciers in the world.

  • 04:43

    The glacier is approximately 12 and a half miles long and moves roughly west to east

  • 04:50

    at a relatively swift 10 to 15 feet per day.

  • 04:54

    The face of the glacier is about one mile wide and 250 feet high.

  • 05:02

    Johns Hopkins Glacier was named after Johns Hopkins University by Harry Fielding Reid

  • 05:08

    in 1893 about 17 years after the school opened.

  • 05:14

    During our visit to Johns Hopkins Glacier, we spotted an adult harbor seal and pup swimming

  • 05:20

    in the ice-filled water near our ship.

  • 05:30

    About an hour after visiting Johns Hopkins Glacier, our ship had sailed into Tarr Inlet

  • 05:37

    to Margerie Glacier and Grand Pacific Glacier.

  • 05:41

    As we approached the glaciers, our ship served pea soup to help keep passengers warm.

  • 05:48

    When we arrived at the glaciers, the Ruby Princess was wrapping up its visit.

  • 05:54

    Only two ships are permitted to visit the park each day and seeing the other ship near

  • 05:58

    the glaciers helped show how big the glaciers are.

  • 06:04

    Margerie Glacier -- which is named after a French geographer -- is one of the highlights

  • 06:09

    of any cruise to Glacier Bay National Park.

  • 06:14

    The glacier is roughly the same size at the face as Johns Hopkins Glacier -- about one

  • 06:19

    mile wide and 250 feet high -- but Margerie Glacier is much longer at approximately 21

  • 06:28

    miles long and it moves roughly southwest to northeast at about six to eight feet per day.

  • 06:36

    Cruise ships can get relatively close to the face of the glacier, which caused many passengers

  • 06:41

    to gather at the bow for photo and viewing opportunities during our cruise.

  • 06:50

    While Margerie Glacier gets most of the attention from passengers waiting to see a calving event

  • 06:55

    -- which did not happen during our visit -- the adjacent Grand Pacific Glacier is still an

  • 07:02

    impressive sight.

  • 07:04

    The glacier is approximately 34 miles long and moves roughly north to south at about

  • 07:10

    one to four feet per day.

  • 07:13

    The face of the glacier is about two miles wide and 150 feet high.

  • 07:19

    The border of the United States and Canada cuts across Grand Pacific Glacier just north

  • 07:25

    of its face.

  • 07:28

    Famed naturalist John Muir named Grand Pacific Glacier in 1879 when the glacier’s terminus

  • 07:35

    was 15 miles further south, near the entrance of Tarr Inlet.

  • 07:41

    Most cruise ships spend about an hour at Margerie Glacier and Grand Pacific Glacier with one

  • 07:47

    side of the ship facing Margerie Glacier for the first half hour and the other side facing

  • 07:52

    the glacier for the second half hour.

  • 07:56

    During our visit to Margerie Glacier and Grand Pacific Glacier, we spotted a few harbor seals

  • 08:02

    on the ice in front of the glaciers.

  • 08:06

    We also spotted a flying bald eagle.

  • 08:17

    In addition to the stunning glaciers you’ll see in Glacier Bay National Park, you’ll

  • 08:22

    also see many spectacular mountainscapes as your ship sails through the park.

  • 08:41

    Throughout the day, our ship’s youth programs provided several Glacier Bay-related activities,

  • 08:47

    including “Meet the Glacier Bay Park Rangers,” and more.

  • 08:51

    Kids even had an opportunity to earn a Junior Ranger patch!

  • 08:57

    As our day in Glacier Bay National Park came to a close and our ship was leaving Glacier

  • 09:02

    Bay, the Park Rangers disembarked our ship and headed back to the nearby park headquarters.

  • 09:19

    About an hour after the Park Rangers departed, we got our final glimpse of a park glacier

  • 09:25

    when we saw Brady Glacier in the distance.

  • 09:29

    The glacier is part of the Brady Icefield, which it shares with Reid Glacier and Lamplugh Glacier.

All

The example sentences of CALVING in videos (10 in total of 14)

while preposition or subordinating conjunction margerie proper noun, singular glacier proper noun, singular gets verb, 3rd person singular present most adverb, superlative of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner attention noun, singular or mass from preposition or subordinating conjunction passengers noun, plural waiting verb, gerund or present participle to to see verb, base form a determiner calving verb, gerund or present participle event noun, singular or mass
increased verb, past participle glacier adjective, comparative calving verb, gerund or present participle has verb, 3rd person singular present continued verb, past participle , augmented verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction both determiner an determiner increase noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction surface noun, singular or mass melt noun, singular or mass as preposition or subordinating conjunction well adverb
some determiner years noun, plural calving verb, gerund or present participle can modal come verb, base form off preposition or subordinating conjunction without preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner hitch noun, singular or mass , other adjective years noun, plural you personal pronoun seem verb, non-3rd person singular present to to run verb, base form into preposition or subordinating conjunction issues noun, plural
so adverb when wh-adverb you personal pronoun see verb, non-3rd person singular present calving verb, gerund or present participle in preposition or subordinating conjunction antarctica proper noun, singular , even adverb even adverb calving verb, gerund or present participle when wh-adverb we personal pronoun use verb, non-3rd person singular present small adjective states noun, plural or coordinating conjunction the determiner
the determiner wildebeest adjective, superlative calving verb, gerund or present participle season noun, singular or mass sees verb, 3rd person singular present as adverb many adjective as preposition or subordinating conjunction 8,000 cardinal number calves noun, plural born verb, past participle daily adjective on preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner southern adjective plains noun, plural .
but coordinating conjunction one cardinal number thing noun, singular or mass i personal pronoun do verb, non-3rd person singular present remember verb, base form is verb, 3rd person singular present my possessive pronoun very adverb first adjective branding verb, gerund or present participle , which wh-determiner came verb, past tense at preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner end noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction calving verb, gerund or present participle ,
we personal pronoun time noun, singular or mass calving verb, gerund or present participle to to happen verb, base form when wh-adverb we personal pronoun hope verb, non-3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction cold adjective weather noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction winter noun, singular or mass storms noun, plural wont verb, non-3rd person singular present hinder noun, singular or mass
really adverb sure adjective i personal pronoun had verb, past tense how wh-adverb it personal pronoun happened verb, past tense we personal pronoun slid verb, past tense right noun, singular or mass into preposition or subordinating conjunction calving verb, gerund or present participle i personal pronoun was verb, past tense thrown verb, past participle
please verb, base form subscribe noun, singular or mass , we personal pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present only adjective weeks noun, plural away adverb from preposition or subordinating conjunction calving verb, gerund or present participle and coordinating conjunction then adverb spring noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction things noun, plural will modal start verb, base form
in preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner case noun, singular or mass , ruth proper noun, singular was verb, past tense a determiner day noun, singular or mass away adverb from preposition or subordinating conjunction calving verb, gerund or present participle and coordinating conjunction had verb, past tense an determiner udder noun, singular or mass full adjective of preposition or subordinating conjunction milk noun, singular or mass .

Use "calving" in a sentence | "calving" example sentences

How to use "calving" in a sentence?

  • I've seen whales calving in the waters off Maui, and I've watched my children being born. But music is the most beautiful thing of all.
    -Steven Tyler-

Definition and meaning of CALVING

What does "calving mean?"

/kav/

verb
give birth.