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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2017
Mass-balance data for Blue Glacier are presented for the 31-year period 1956–86. The glacier location is strongly maritime with annual precipitation of 3500 to 5000 mm, most of which falls as winter snow. The low elevation of the glacier results in large amounts of summer ablation and thus significant annual mass exchange. Blue Glacier has been in approximate equilibrium with recent climate during the past 30 years with a slightly positive mean annual net balance of 0.3 m and a terminus advance of 150 m. Comparison with other glaciers in western North America indicates that this pattern of mass increase in response to recent climate is not typical but may be specific to a maritime location.
Due to heavy amounts of winter snowfall, an accumulation area ratio of only 0.5 is sufficient to maintain a zero balance on Blue Glacier. A strong gradient of increasing snowfall with elevation contributes to a linear relationship between net balance and elevation throughout the total altitude range of the glacier. This relationship is consistent over the period of record and is not dependent on an overall net positive balance, as the pattern persists even during periods of strongly negative mass balance. A relationship between measured mass balance and equilibrium-line altitude provides a reasonable method to compute mass balance.