Fjord in Alaska, US
Russell Fiord
Russell Fiord , also spelled Russell Fjord , is a fjord in the U.S. state of Alaska . It extends north to Disenchantment Bay , the terminus of Hubbard Glacier , at the head of Yakutat Bay . The fjord was named in 1901 by Marcus Baker of the U.S. Geological Survey for explorer Israel Russell , who discovered the estuary in 1891 while exploring the Yakutat region.
The opening into Disenchantment Bay has been periodically blocked by Hubbard Glacier, turning Russell Fiord into a lake collecting freshwater run-off from the glacier. The entrance closed from May to October 1986, and again briefly in 2002.[ 1]
Russell Fiord Wilderness
Opening into Russell Fjord
The Russell Fiord Wilderness is a wilderness area within the Tongass National Forest , protecting 348,701 acres (1,411 km2 ) surrounding the fjord. The wilderness was established by the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act in 1980 and is managed by the U.S. Forest Service . The Wrangell-Saint Elias Wilderness borders it to the northwest.
References
59°48′04″N 139°19′27″W / 59.80111°N 139.32417°W / 59.80111; -139.32417