Garfield Range Explained

Garfield Range
Country:Canada
Region:Nunavut
Parent:Arctic Cordillera
Range Coordinates:81.8019°N -72.6611°W

The Garfield Range is a mountain range on Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada. The mountains are made of Paleozoic rocks and rise to heights between 1067m (3,501feet) and 1433m (4,701feet) and are separated by valleys through which flow the major rivers fed by the ice fields and glaciers. Like most of the mountain ranges in the Arctic, it is one of the world's northernmost mountain ranges.

The Garfield Range is located at Lake Hazen which is the world's largest lake north of the Arctic Circle by volume[1] and acts as a barrier between the lake and the Grant Land ice cap and nunataks of the United States Range to the north. The Gilman Glacier is one of the largest glaciers draining into Lake Hazen. To the est, the mountain range extends across the Hazen Plateau while, to the west, it runs virtually to the head of Tanquary Fiord. The mountains, which tower as much as 1500m (4,900feet) above Lake Hazen, typically consists of steep snow-free slopes facing south, with north-facing slopes of shallow gradients covered in snow and ice. At intervals, the range is bisected by broad valleys 5kmto8kmkm (03milesto05mileskm) in width that are occasionally filled by glacial tongues, such as the monumental Henrieta Nesmith Glacier that descends to within 4km (02miles) of Lake Hazen near its northwestern end.

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.ilec.or.jp/database/nam/nam-32.html World Lakes Database: Hazen Lake