National Park Collection

Glacier National Park

The Crown of the Continent. Over a million acres of rugged peaks, glacial valleys, and pristine alpine lakes straddling the Continental Divide. The Rocky Mountains at their most dramatic — rendered as contour line art from USGS elevation data.

Create a Glacier National Park Print

Going-to-the-Sun Road

One of America's most scenic drives — 50 miles crossing the Continental Divide at Logan Pass, 6,646 feet.

Logan Pass
Continental Divide · 6,646 ft
The highest point on Going-to-the-Sun Road. The Continental Divide crosses here — contour lines reveal the abrupt transition between Pacific and Atlantic drainages.
Lake McDonald
West Side · 3,153 ft
The park's largest lake — 10 miles long, carved by glaciers. The contour lines show the classic U-shaped valley profile, steep walls plunging to a flat lake bed.
St. Mary Lake
East Side · 4,484 ft
The park's second largest lake, framed by Wild Goose Island. The eastern front of the Rockies rises abruptly here — the contour lines compress dramatically.
The Loop
Going-to-the-Sun · 4,200 ft
The famous hairpin turn where the road gains 3,000 feet through a series of switchbacks carved into the cliff face. The contour lines here are almost vertical.

High Country

Alpine cirques, arêtes, and horn peaks shaped by millennia of glacial carving.

Grinnell Glacier
Many Glacier · 6,900 ft
One of the park's remaining glaciers — now less than a third of its 1850 size. The cirque walls rise steeply, their contour lines forming a natural amphitheater.
Mount Cleveland
Highest Peak · 10,479 ft
The tallest peak in Glacier. Its north face drops 4,000 feet — one of the steepest walls in the Northern Rockies. The contour lines nearly merge.
Hidden Lake
Logan Pass · 6,375 ft
A short hike from Logan Pass reveals this turquoise gem nestled in a glacial cirque. The surrounding arêtes form dramatic knife-edge ridges in the contour patterns.
Two Medicine
Southeast Corner · 5,164 ft
A quieter corner of the park where glacial valleys converge. Rising Wolf Mountain and Sinopah Mountain create a dramatic frame visible in the steep contour gradients.

Sculpted by Ice

Glacier National Park owes its landscape to ice — not the small glaciers that remain, but the massive ice sheets that carved these valleys over millions of years. Every U-shaped valley, every hanging valley, every cirque lake tells the same story: ice grinding through rock, leaving behind the most dramatic mountain topography in the Lower 48.

Our prints render this glacial landscape from 1-arc-second USGS 3DEP elevation data. The contour lines reveal what photography can only suggest — the true three-dimensional shape of these mountains. Arêtes appear as tightly stacked parallel lines. Cirques show as concentric ovals. Glacial valleys display the characteristic flat floor and steep walls.

The Heritage preset captures the feel of classic USGS Montana quadrangle maps. The Terrain preset reveals elevation gradients from valley floor to summit. The Mountain Portrait preset isolates the contour patterns for a stark, gallery-ready look.

Every print is rendered individually for your exact coordinates. Choose a pass, a glacier, or a full valley — no two prints are identical. Museum-quality prints from $29 with free worldwide shipping.

Explore More Locations

Yellowstone North Cascades Denali

The Crown of the Continent. On Your Wall.

Search for any Glacier viewpoint, peak, or valley.

Open the Studio