Distribution of Freshwater - Glaciers and Icefields

Glaciers and icefields are huge masses of ice, formed on land by the compaction and re-crystallization of snow, that move very slowly down slopes, or move outward due to their own weight. In Canada, an estimated area of 200 000 square kilometres, or about 2% of the country’s area is covered by glaciers and icefields. A huge quantity of freshwater is frozen in the polar ice caps and in high mountain glaciers. Glaciers and icefields are found in Western Cordillera and the mountains in the eastern Arctic. At present there are no reliable figures on the total number of glaciers in Canada. Glaciers exert a direct influence on the hydrologic cycle by slowing the passage of water through the cycle. Like groundwater, glaciers are excellent natural storehouses of water.

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Dernière modification janvier 16, 2026, 21:09 (TU)
Créé le janvier 16, 2026, 21:09 (TU)
contains_pii non
crisis_categories Tempêtes hivernales
criticality_level Faible
data_formats JP2; ZIP; other
fair_openness Level 2 - Machine-readable
geographic_scope Canada
sensitivity_level Faible
source_inventaire Inventaire_W
source_url https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/e5ea9140-8893-11e0-858a-6cf049291510
subject form_descriptors, nature_and_environment, science_and_technology
update_frequency as_needed
year_most_recent 2022-03-14 19:49:11.534000
year_start 2016-09-26 15:27:31.984000