When 83-year-old Paul Bowen was out hand trolling near Petersburg and noticed green water he knew something was happening.
“This is amazing, this turquoise color as far as we can see on Frederick Sound,” Bowen said. “It’s very unusual.”
He knew the color was from fine particulates mixed with fresh glacier water that were releasing into the sea. Bowen has been paying attention to the Baird Glacier for decades. He was the high school geology teacher for about 35 years and regularly took students by boat to study the glacier. He’s seen outburst flooding before also known as jokulhaup. The last time was 1991 but it wasn’t this extreme. It went pretty much unnoticed unless you were close to the glacier where the water was more of grayish.
“It’s very unusual to have this much out wash of color,” Bowen said.
Bowen wasn’t the only one who saw something odd while out boating. Brad Hunter started to notice small icebergs in Frederick Sound north of Petersburg. They were a little too far North to be from nearby Leconte Glacier. Hunter works for the U.S. Forest Service and he and another worker were on their way to Thomas Bay to check on a trail there. He saw more icebergs than usual and silty water so they decided to check out Baird Glacier.
“And as we got closer we started to see that there was a stronger current,” Hunter said, “and also started seeing choppy water which there wasn’t any wind so the chop was from this strong current coming off of Baird Glacier.”
Hunter had studied outburst flooding before but had never experienced anything this extensive.
“It was very cool,” Hunter said.
Hunter had been to the Thomas Bay area many times but had never seen it like this. It was near low tide but instead dry flat ground he was surrounded by water. He was about a mile away from the glacier.
“There were no landmarks left. Everything was underwater,” Hunter said. “The current was running so strong you could not idle in there, at 2400 rpms we were not making any headway. So, we shut the motor off, drifted a little bit. With a GPS we were able to document that we were floating back out at approximately five miles per hour.”
Hunter reported the incident to several others at the Forest Service and the next day flew over the glacier with a couple of other scientists. They noticed that the water was calming but there were icebergs everywhere. More had calved off into the lake in front of the glacier.
“A lot of it’s not the blue ice. It’s kind of a dark, kind of a dirty ice,” Hunter said. “It isn’t quite as visible as some types of ice are on the water.”
As things unfold the Forest Service is telling local boaters to look out for ice in unusual places.
And perhaps advice from the past is also relevant. It’s what Petersburg’s current geology teacher Victor Trautman heard from Paul Bowen 20 years ago.
“He said, you know, go over to Baird Glacier, it’s a good field trip for Geology students but never do it in the fall,” Trautman said. “He said there is a lake that forms in the back on the ice and over time the lake will finally erode its way through and break the ice dam and then flood the whole area.”
And flood the whole area it did. Greenish turquoise water could be seen in the Petersburg area for days. And to an old timer like Paul Bowen, it’s something worth noting.
“It’s never been this extensive so I think its so I think its one of the major out washes we’ve had in years,” Bowen said. “Quite an event.”
They still have many questions that they’d like answered such as what does this mean for the life of the glacier? Will the flood affect unique vegetation that’s being studied there? And how might all that fresh green water affect area fish?
More flights had been scheduled over the glacier to try to solve at least some of them.