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All Paper Prints "Glacial Paradise"
Alaska-Mendenhall Glacier.jpg Image 1 of
Alaska-Mendenhall Glacier.jpg
Alaska-Mendenhall Glacier.jpg

"Glacial Paradise"

from $55.00

A wide view of Mendenhall Glacier with glacial ice to the left and a waterfall to the right.

Glacial ice is sometimes blue because the red (long wavelengths) part of white light is absorbed by ice and the blue (short wavelengths) light is transmitted and scattered. The longer the path light travels in ice, the more blue it appears. Mendenhall Glacier is one of the many large glaciers that flow from the 1,500 square mile expanse of rock, snow, and ice known as the Juneau Icefield. As glacial ice continues to build, gravity pulls the ice down slope. The glacier was named for the American physicist and meteorologist Thomas Corwin Mendenhall.

(click on image to enlarge)

**PLEASE CONTACT ME ABOUT COMBINING/REDUCING SHIPPING COSTS FOR MULTIPLE ITEMS**

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A wide view of Mendenhall Glacier with glacial ice to the left and a waterfall to the right.

Glacial ice is sometimes blue because the red (long wavelengths) part of white light is absorbed by ice and the blue (short wavelengths) light is transmitted and scattered. The longer the path light travels in ice, the more blue it appears. Mendenhall Glacier is one of the many large glaciers that flow from the 1,500 square mile expanse of rock, snow, and ice known as the Juneau Icefield. As glacial ice continues to build, gravity pulls the ice down slope. The glacier was named for the American physicist and meteorologist Thomas Corwin Mendenhall.

(click on image to enlarge)

**PLEASE CONTACT ME ABOUT COMBINING/REDUCING SHIPPING COSTS FOR MULTIPLE ITEMS**

A wide view of Mendenhall Glacier with glacial ice to the left and a waterfall to the right.

Glacial ice is sometimes blue because the red (long wavelengths) part of white light is absorbed by ice and the blue (short wavelengths) light is transmitted and scattered. The longer the path light travels in ice, the more blue it appears. Mendenhall Glacier is one of the many large glaciers that flow from the 1,500 square mile expanse of rock, snow, and ice known as the Juneau Icefield. As glacial ice continues to build, gravity pulls the ice down slope. The glacier was named for the American physicist and meteorologist Thomas Corwin Mendenhall.

(click on image to enlarge)

**PLEASE CONTACT ME ABOUT COMBINING/REDUCING SHIPPING COSTS FOR MULTIPLE ITEMS**

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