Glaciers / Glacial Features

 
glacier trail
Wheeler Peak Glacier comes into view on the Bristlecone/Glacier Trail.

Alana Dimmick

Great Basin National Park is home to the only glacier in Nevada, and one of the southernmost glaciers in the United States. The Wheeler Peak Glacier sits at the base of Wheeler Peak, in a protected cirque around 11,500 feet in elevation. The alpine glacier is about 2 acres in area. Exact depth is unknown.

What Is a Glacier?

A glacier is a body of ice that lasts from year to year and that flows under its own weight. Glacial ice is made of crushed and recrystallized snowflakes. If the yearly snowfall is greater than yearly melting and evaporation, a glacier will grow. If melting is greater than snowfall, a glacier will shrink. A crevice that appears each summer near the head of the glacier indicates that the ice is moving.

There are two types of glaciers. Contintental ice sheets cover large areas with ice. Alpine glaciers, like the Wheeler Peak Glacier, are smaller, and found in mountainous terrain.

A Different Climate

The glacier is a remnant from the past, telling of a much different climate in a region that is now a desert. The Pleistocene (approx 3 million to 10,000 years ago) was a time of advancing glaciers alternating with warm, dry inter-glacial periods. Continental ice sheets lay to the north of the Great Basin region. Alpine glaciers sculpted some of the mountain ranges within the Great Basin, such as the South Snake Range in Great Basin National Park.

During the last glacial period, glaciers moved down to as low as 9,200 feet. The climate was an average 8 degrees (F) cooler than today. But climate changes that began with the Holocene period (10,000 years ago) rapidly warmed the region, melting the continental glaciers to the north, and the individual alpine glaciers within the region. The Wheeler Peak Glacier is the last alpine glacier to survive. With continued warming predicted, it is likely the glacier will disappear in as little as 20 years.

 
view of mountains and rock
View of Doso Doyabi (on right) and rock glacier surrounded by snow. If you look carefully, you can see lobes in the rock glacier.

NPS/G. Baker

Wheeler Cirque Rock Glacier

A rock glacier is a lobe of angular boulders and cobbles that resembles an alpine glacier in outline and in its slow downslope movement. They are found in mountain ranges throughout the world. Inside a rock glacier, ice fills the spaces between the blocks. By freezing, thawing, and sagging, the ice works with gravity to provide the force that moves the rock glacier.
Viewed from the cliffs above, arc shaped ridges are visible on the surface of the Wheeler Peak Glacier. These ridges are curved because the blocks near the midline of the rock glacier are creeping faster than those on either side.
You can find more information about rock glaciers at our subject site.
 
view from Wheeler Peak of cirque
View from Wheeler Peak of the Wheeler Cirque glacier (on right) with crevasses, which indicate movement, and the rock glacier (on left).

NPS/G. Baker

Visiting the Glacier

The Wheeler Peak Rock Glacier can be seen from several locations in the park.

The Wheeler Peak Overlook on the Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive is the only vantage point from the road. The rock glacier is seen at the bottom of the sheer rock face of Wheeler Peak.

The Bristlecone/Glacier Trail (4.6 miles roundtrip) will take you to the foot of the glacier. The trailhead for this hike is located at the end of the Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive. The trail begins at an elevation of 9,800 feet and climbs another 1,100 feet. Use caution around the toe of the glacier, as the boulders may not be stable, and small rockslides are common from the cliffs above. To see the ice in the alpine glacier, late fall is best, after the mantle of snow melts.




 
View of ice and rock View of ice and rock

Left image
1958 photo of Wheeler Cirque Glacier
Credit: W.D. Massey, Ed. Lawrence, Darwin Lambert

Right image
2012 photo of Wheeler Cirque Glacier
Credit: Gretchen Baker

How the Wheeler Cirque Glacier Has Changed

Although many glaciers are retreating rapidly, the tiny glacier in the Wheeler Peak Cirque is hanging on, although as of 2020 its size is estimated to be just 2.1 acres.

Last updated: August 21, 2021

Park footer

Contact Info

Mailing Address:

100 Great Basin National Park
Baker, NV 89311

Phone:

775-234-7331
Available 8:00 am - 4:00 pm, Monday through Friday. Closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year's Day

Contact Us