The Glaciers of Blackfoot Mountains and Mount Logan
Blackfoot Glacier with its deep blue ice lays along the left side of the ridge while Jackson Glacier lays on the right, also shoing a section of dense blue glacial ice.
Here is a link to google maps for the location of this beautiful place.
Blackfoot Glacier is the second largest of the remaining 25 glaciers in Glacier National Park, Montana. Blackfoot Glacier is just to the north of Blackfoot Mountain and near Jackson Glacier. The glacier was most recently measured in 2005 at 441 acres (1.78 km2), yet when first documented in 1850, the glacier also included the now separate Jackson Glacier and together, they covered 1,875 acres (7.59 km2).
In 1850, there were an estimated 150 glaciers in the park. Glaciologists have stated that by the year 2030, all the glaciers in the park may disappear. However, under a modest increase in overall carbon dioxidelevels, some glaciers will remain until the late 23rd century.
(Research Source)
On the lower right side of this image is Mount Jackson and to the left middle of the image is Blackfoot Mountain, behind that is Red Eagle Pass, Almost a Dog Mountain, Norris Mountain and many more.
Along that ridge in front runs the Continental Divide and these are part of the Lewis Range, a sub range of the Rocky Mountains within the Glacier National Park in Montana.
I lensed this image of these incredibly harsh and jagged mountains while flying over and exploring the entire Rocky Mountain Range from the Canadian Border down to Yellowstone River.
This image is from my ongoing project in which I am trying to raise awareness of the 47% of the USA and 90% of Canada that remain unpopulated wilderness.
Where Eagles Fly - The American Wilderness Expedition is my personal mission to introduce people to these amazing locations that surround us.
If you like what you see here upvote then resteemit so that others may experience these wondrous places as well.
Yehaw!!

Wow! very awsome photo 💕 great nature 💕
keep it up and always be happy my friend 💕
It is amazing. Great work!
Wow I really hope those glaciers last longer than 2030!
They will be lost far too soon. Thanks for posting more amazing photos, keep it up!
upvoted and resteemed as always @skypilot. love everything you post. solid content and for a good cause. Cheers for that.
Being able to see views like that all the time while flying must be amazing, it's like an entirely different and unique view of the world. But I also know it's takes a unique skill set to pilot an aeroplane - far more complicated then most people appreciate. Two friends I had at university were learning to be pilots, one now is a commercial airline pilot and the other in the UK RAF - but both spent many hard hours studying at the time to learn to do it.