Girls on the ice of Alaska

September 20, 2012

University Relations

 Ned Rozell
13/9/2012


This summer, the Girls on Ice program visited an Alaska glacier for the first time. It probably won鈥檛 be the last, said organizer Joanna Young.

鈥淲e talked about how the girls would be inspired, but we didn鈥檛 count on how much we would be inspired,鈥 said Young, a graduate student in the College of Natural Science and Mathematics at 性欲社. In July, she, two other grad students, and a mountaineer led nine teenage girls onto Gulkana Glacier for eight days of science and life on ice.

Photo by Joanna Young. From left, Erin McQuin of Snohomish, Washington, instructor Marijke Habermann, a graduate student at 性欲社, and Heather Gregory of Anchorage. Habermann had just helped the girls cross a Gulkana Glacier stream on their way back down the glacier after being stuck at a higher camp for an extra night due to a storm. The streams and the glacier were slippery that day after more than 36 hours of continuous rainfall.
Photo by Joanna Young. From left, Erin McQuin of Snohomish, Washington, instructor Marijke Habermann, a graduate student at 性欲社, and Heather Gregory of Anchorage. Habermann had just helped the girls cross a Gulkana Glacier stream on their way back down the glacier after being stuck at a higher camp for an extra night due to a storm. The streams and the glacier were slippery that day after more than 36 hours of continuous rainfall.


The Girls on Ice program, the creation of Alaska glaciologist Erin Pettit, has existed for more than a decade on the glaciers of Washington. Pettit, an assistant professor with the College of Natural Science and Mathematics, expanded the program this year to include Alaska, entrusting the details and organization to Young and fellow graduate students Barbara Truessel and Marijke Habermann. One of their first tasks was to choose an Alaska glacier for the program. They decided on the Alaska Range鈥檚 Gulkana Glacier.

鈥淚t was the perfect spot,鈥 Young said. 鈥淲e all knew the glacier well, it鈥檚 road accessible, it鈥檚 got this Indiana Jones bridge and it鈥檚 safe 鈥 there鈥檚 no huge crevasses.鈥

The trio of instructors, along with Cecelia 鈥淐eCe鈥 Mortenson, who was fresh off a guiding trip on Mount McKinley, walked nine girls from Alaska and Washington over a footbridge, four miles up boulders and into a base camp they set up on rocks next to the glacier. Most of the girls had never worn plastic boots, crampons, or a 50-pound backpack.The 15-to17-year-olds faced physical and mental challenges they never imagined.

鈥淭he moraine's rocky, unstable side was not the best landscape for me to be on,鈥 said 18-year old Heather Gregory of Anchorage of her initiation to the program. 鈥淚've never felt so scared to tumble down a hill before! But thankfully the instructors were there to calm me down and guide me through the moraine.鈥

Another participant, 16-year-old Chloe Smith of Palmer, said via email: 鈥淭he hard part was facing the things that scared me or intimidated me, and the things that made me uncomfortable. Walking over a rickety suspension bridge. Carefully stepping over crevasse after crevasse as you were engulfed in wind, rain, and fog. Listening to the thunder and distant rock slides from inside our three small tents. I told myself, 鈥榊ou can do this. Even if it's scary, you know you can. Think of how you'll look back immediately after and say I did that.鈥"

Smith and her new friends impressed their instructors by their unwavering support of one another and their enduring a few days of rain with nowhere to escape except their tents.

鈥淚 was amazed at how nicely they interacted,鈥 said Habermann, who models a Greenland glacier for her graduate work.

鈥淭hey were so supportive of each other, and really kind to each other,鈥 Young said of the girls. 鈥淭hey were so respectful of us as instructors. It was an opportunity for them to grow a lot and be like adults, and they took it.鈥

The girls performed science on the glacier, choosing studies on glacier ecology, the effects of rocks and dirt on glacial melt or water discharge from the streams on the glacier. After returning to Fairbanks, the girls gave presentations on what they learned at the university. And they experienced a transformation typical of girls who have attended the intense program on Washington glaciers.

鈥淏efore Girls on Ice, mountains were just mountains. Valleys were just valleys. Now when I see them they're full of questions and stories,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淕irls on Ice encouraged a new kind of curiosity in me about things I would have thought boring before. Now I'm considering to pursue geology after high school.鈥

鈥淚 liked the living-on-a-glacier part because being on the head of the glacier made you feel like Queen of the Valley,鈥 Gregory said. 鈥淲e also had makeshift classrooms in the tents, and the learning-then-discussions-after were really fun too.鈥

One of Smith鈥檚 favorite memories of the program is when another girl returned to camp with a tube of greenish glacier mud. That evening, the girls and instructors applied mud facials to one another, laughing and snapping photos.

鈥淲e鈥檙e out on the glacier, but we鈥檙e still girls,鈥 Truessel said.

The instructors, busy trying to complete their own degrees, found the added stress of conducting a school for girls was one of the most rewarding parts of their graduate school experiences so far.

鈥淚 learned about grant writing, organizing a huge expedition, covering all the legal stuff and teaching science to girls who have no background in it,鈥 Young said.

鈥淢arijke and I have fantasized about having something like this in Switzerland when we鈥檙e back there,鈥 said Truessel, who like Habermann is from Switzerland.

Girls on Ice is free for the high-schoolers, which means that its organizers have to raise all the funds to keep the program alive (this year鈥檚 sponsors included the Alaska Climate Science Center, the National Science Foundation, 性欲社鈥檚 College of Natural Science and Mathematics, the North Face and private donors).

Even though they have much work ahead in order to graduate, Young, Truessel and Habermann said they will do what they can to help create a 2013 Alaska version of Girls on Ice.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just worth it,鈥 Young said.

Since the late 1970s, 性欲社鈥 Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the 性欲社 research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.