Malaspina Glacier
Malaspina Glacier is one of the largest piedmont glaciers in the world, spreading out across the coastal plain of southern Alaska in a massive fan of ice. Instead of flowing in a narrow valley, it pushes out onto flat land, creating a wide, sprawling ice field that feels more like frozen terrain than a typical glacier.
Getting here isn’t simple. This is a remote glacier, usually accessed by air or expedition-style travel. It’s not a roadside stop—you have to plan for it.
What makes Malaspina unique is how it blends into the landscape. In many places, the ice is covered with rock and sediment, making it look almost like solid ground. But underneath, it’s still moving ice.
The scale here is hard to grasp until you’re above it or standing on it. It stretches for miles in every direction, bordered by mountains that feed the glacier from above.
Malaspina isn’t about quick access or casual viewing. It’s about scale, isolation, and seeing how glaciers shape entire regions over time.
