<h2><SPAN name="page_041">AN OREGON GLACIER</SPAN></h2>
<p class="indent">
There are records all about us of events which took place upon the
earth long before there were any human inhabitants. These records
have been preserved in the rocks, in the geographic features of
the land and water, and in the distribution of the animals and
plants. On every hand appear evidences of changes in the surface
of the earth and in the climate.</p>
<p class="indent">
Through all the central and northern United States, if we except
some of the mountains of the West, the winter snows entirely disappear
long before the coming of summer. But the climate of this region
has not always been so pleasant and mild. Lands now densely peopled
were once buried under a thick mantle of ice which lasted through
many thousands of years.</p>
<p class="indent">
Scattered over the surface of the northern United States are vast
numbers of boulders and rock fragments which are not at all like
the solid rocks beneath the soil. The history of these materials
takes us back to the Glacial period, which can be best understood
from a study of some one of the glaciers now existing upon the
mountains of the northwestern part of our country.</p>
<p class="indent">
Among the lofty mountain ranges of the Cordilleran region there
are many peaks upon which perpetual snow-banks nestle, defying
the long summer days. Where the winters are long and cold and the
storms are severe, immense drifts of snow collect in the hollows
and cañons of the mountain slopes. Each summer all or a part
of this snow melts. Upon the northern slopes the melting process
is slower, and if there happens to be a large basin upon that side,
an extensive field of snow remains until the winter storms come
again. Each winter new snow is added to the surface, while the
older snow, becoming hard and firm through repeated freezing and
thawing, at last turns to ice.</p>
<p class="indent">
This mass of snow and ice does not remain stationary, as might
be expected from its apparent solidity. Under the influence of
its own weight and of alternations of heat and cold, it flows down
the incline like a very thick liquid. During the winter the ice
melts but little, and the movement is slow, but in the summer,
under the influence of the warm days and cool nights, both the
melting and the rate of flow of the ice are increased. A moving
body of snow and ice of this sort is called a "glacier." It creeps
down the mountain slope and into some cañon, until, in the
warmer air of the lower mountains, the rate of advance is exactly
balanced by the rate of melting at the lower end of the mass. The
glaciers in the United States are at present comparatively small,
but once these icy masses stretched over the mountains and lowlands
of a large portion of the continent.</p>
<p class="indent">
In the southern Sierra Nevada mountains no permanent snow exists
below an elevation of about eleven thousand feet, but as we go
north snow-fields are found lower and lower, until in the fiords
of Alaska enormous glaciers reach down to the sea.</p>
<p class="indent">
A glacier worthy of our study may be found upon the Three Sisters,
a group of lofty and picturesque volcanic mountains rising from
the summit of the Cascade Range in central Oregon. There is a deep
depression between two of the peaks, which slopes down to the north
and is thus particularly well adapted to catch and retain the drifting
snows. Consequently the glacier to which it gives rise is of exceptional
size, being nearly three miles long and half a mile wide.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 514px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig016.jpg" width-obs="515" height-obs="341" alt="Fig. 16">
FIG. 16.—THE THREE SISTERS, FROM THE NORTH
<p class="imgnote">Showing snow-fields and glacier. Fields
of recent lava appear in the foreground</p>
</div>
<p class="indent">
The easiest path to the Three Sisters is by way of the McKenzie
River from Eugene, Oregon. The McKenzie is a noted stream and one
of the most beautiful in the state. The river courses through dense
forests, and its clear, cold water is filled with trout. So tempestuous
is the weather about the Cascade range that July is almost the only
month in which one can visit the Three Sisters without danger of
being caught in severe storms.</p>
<p class="indent">
The traveller leaves the river a few miles above McKenzie Bridge,
where a small tributary known as Lost Creek joins it. Lost Creek
flows under the lava from a lake near the Three Sisters, while
another stream, coming from the glacier of which we are in search,
flows down the same valley upon the surface of the lava and almost
directly over the hidden stream.</p>
<p class="indent">
Upon the summit of the Cascade Range the dense forests of the river
valley give place to more open woods interspersed with park-like
meadows. A few miles away to the south rise the volcanic peaks of
the Three Sisters, clear and cold in the mountain air, wrapt about
with a mantle of white except where the slopes are too precipitous
to hold the snow.</p>
<p class="indent">
An indistinct trail leads through the tamarack forest and over a
field of rugged lava to the base of the peaks. Here we come upon
a swiftly flowing stream of a strange milky color. This appearance
is due to the presence of fine mud, the product of the work of the
glacier at the head of the stream as it slowly and with mighty
power grinds away the surface of the rocks over which it moves.
Wherever one meets a stream of this kind, he will probably be safe
in asserting that it is fed by a glacier upon some distant mountain
peak.</p>
<p class="indent">
This little stream, the course of which we must follow to reach
the glacier, is choked with sand and pebbles brought to it by the
moving ice. These are not ordinary stream pebbles, for they have
strangely flattened sides which often show scratches, and look as
if they had been ground off against a grindstone. They are the
tools with which the ice does its work. The ice block takes up
the rock fragments which fall upon its surface or which it tears
from beneath, and carries them along, grinding every surface which
it touches. The fragments are dropped at the end of the glacier,
and the smaller pebbles are washed away down the stream that flows
from the melting ice.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 511px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig017.jpg" width-obs="511" height-obs="350" alt="Fig. 17">
FIG. 17.—GLACIER ON THE THREE SISTERS</div>
<p class="indent">
We follow up the little glacial creek, past icy snow-banks and
through groves of fir trees where the warm sunshine brings out
the resinous odors. Upon one side of the cañon there lies
a field of black lava which not many hundreds of years ago forced
this glacial creek from an earlier channel into its present bed. Now
we come upon what appears at first to be a snow-bank lying across
the course of the stream, and from beneath which its waters issue.
Deep cracks in the outer mass of snow show the clear, pale-green
ice below. This is the lower end of the glacier which we have been
so long a time in reaching.</p>
<p class="indent">
A short climb up a steep slope brings us to the top of the glacier.
It forms a perfectly even plain, extending back with a gentle slope
to the head of a deep notch between the two northern Sisters, while
above and beyond rise the steeper snow-fields, from which this
ice is continually renewed.</p>
<p class="indent">
The glacier does not terminate in the usual manner, with a stream
flowing from its centre, for the outlet is at one side, while the
middle abuts against a low mound of rock. This mound we find most
interesting, for upon reaching its top we look down into a volcanic
crater. From this crater flowed the great stream of lava to which
we have already referred. The lava ran downward, bending this way
and that among the hollows, until it spread nearly to the McKenzie
River.</p>
<p class="indent">
During the Glacial period, before the eruption took place, this
glacier was much larger. The summit of the Cascade Range was then
covered by glaciers. This fact we know from the presence of grooved
and polished rocks wherever the surface has not been worn away
or covered with newer lava. The Glacial period had passed away
and the climate had become much the same as it now is when the
volcanic forces broke out at the spot where the crater is situated.
The eruption undoubtedly melted the ice in the vicinity, but after
it had ceased and the rocks had become cold, the glacier never gained
strength enough to push the loose materials of the volcanic cone out
of its path. The ice banked up snugly against the obstruction, and
as it melted the water found its way out at the side of the lava.</p>
<p class="indent">
although the surface of the glacier appears at first to offer an
easy route to the higher mountain slopes, yet there are numerous
hidden crevices into which one may fall. The safest arrangement
is to tie a company of people together with a stout rope, so that
if one falls into a crevice the rope will save him. Toward the
middle of the glacier the ice becomes so badly fissured that it is
necessary to turn toward the right margin. There are two sets of
these fissures, one parallel to the direction in which the glacier
is moving, the other at right angles. They are due to the strain
to which the ice is subjected as it moves along at an uneven rate
and over a surface composed of hollows and ridges.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 515px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig018.jpg" width-obs="515" height-obs="361" alt="Fig. 18">
FIG. 18.—MORAINE AT THE END OF THE GLACIER</div>
<p class="indent">
Leaving the glacier, we climb upon a long low ridge of gravel and
boulders mixed with fragments of ice. The fragments of rock which
have fallen upon the surface of the ice or been torn from the rock
over which it is moving, have been heaped up along its sides somewhat
as a ridge of snow is raised along each side of the course of a
snow-plough. Such a ridge of débris along the side of a
glacier is known as a marginal moraine. A similar ridge, formed by
the accumulation of rock fragments at the lower end of the glacier,
is a terminal moraine. These ridges and hollows formed by the ice
are found all over the northern portion of the United States. The
hollows once filled with ice are now occupied by the beautiful
lakes of this portion of our country.</p>
<p class="indent">
As we climb along the moraine at the margin of the glacier, many
openings appear in the clear green ice. There is the sound of gurgling
waters, and occasionally pieces of ice and rock fall into dimly
outlined caverns which are narrow at the top, but far below widen
out to the proportion of chambers.</p>
<p class="indent">
After the head of the glacier is attained there is still a hard
climb over the snow-fields, which extend upward so far that they
seem to have no end. When at last the gap between the peaks is
gained we are completely tired out. The summit of the middle Sister
rising directly above us is still a thousand feet higher, but there
is not time to-day to reach it.</p>
<p class="indent">
A magnificent vista is spread out upon every hand. Extending north
and south along the crest of the Cascade Range there is a line
of sharp snowy peaks with summer clouds floating about them. How
these peaks contrast with the dark blue of the surrounding forests!
Opposite us, upon the south, is the third Sister, white with snow
from top to bottom, while in the basin between this peak and the
ridge on which we are standing lie the remnants of a once mighty
glacier.</p>
<p class="indent">
But it is time to return. The cold, foggy clouds are hiding the
summits and will soon envelop the spot where we stand. We go down
by a different path, but over almost continuous snow-fields, for
more than two miles. The return is much easier than the ascent,
although if one lost his footing upon some steep slope, it would
mean a long slide or tumble. The solid earth is reached without
accident. What a relief to have some firm hold for the feet again!
Climbing over a field of rough lava is easier than toiling through
soft snow.</p>
<div class="img_ctr" style="width: 507px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig019.jpg" width-obs="507" height-obs="377" alt="Fig. 19">
FIG. 19.—A BOULDER LEFT BY A GLACIER</div>
<p class="indent">
The region about the Three Sisters is just as nature left it, for
the home of the nearest settler is many miles away. Although now
it has few visitors, this country will become attractive when its
wonderful volcanic and glacial phenomena are better known.</p>
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