Athabasca Glacier
Walk on a living glacier in the Canadian Rockies — one of the most accessible ice fields on Earth, retreating visibly before your eyes.
About this spectacle
The Athabasca Glacier is one of the most accessible glaciers in North America, spilling down from the Columbia Icefield along the Icefields Parkway in the Canadian Rockies. Visitors walk across compacted blue-white ice, feeling the cold radiating underfoot while surrounded by walls of ancient compressed snow. The glacier's surface is striated and fractured, revealing deep crevasses and meltwater channels of vivid turquoise. Terminal moraines mark decades of retreat, offering a stark visual record of ice loss. On clear days, the surrounding peaks reflect in pooled meltwater near the glacier's toe. The air carries a distinct chill even in summer, and the creak and drip of meltwater is a constant soundtrack. Interpretive signs along the access path mark where the glacier's edge stood in past decades, making the scale of retreat viscerally apparent. It is a dramatic encounter with both geological time and contemporary climate change.
When to go
May — Oct, peak Jun — Aug
Getting there
Nearest airport: YEG. Nearest city: Jasper.
Booking options
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