Inuit Nunangat Stories
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Arctic, Circumpolar stories curated by @Northern_Clips [Full story? Click on headline]
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Teaching above the Arctic Circle makes Port Townsend woman humble

Teaching above the Arctic Circle makes Port Townsend woman humble | Inuit Nunangat Stories | Scoop.it

[excerpt]

Socks on the doorknobs prevent your hand from freezing to the metal.

Locking your front door isn’t a good idea.

Raw seal intestines are tastier than whale.

Coping with extreme cold and swallowing seal innards are some of the things that Katie Campbell, a 2006 Port Townsend High School graduate, has learned to take in stride in her first year of teaching special education in Kivalina, Alaska, a coastal village on a barrier reef 127 miles above the Arctic Circle.

She’s also learned that Inupiat people speak with their faces — raising the eyebrows means yes, scrunching up the face means no.

“I don’t think any of my students has said ‘yes’ or ‘no’ out loud since school started,” said Campbell, 23.

Campbell left Port Townsend in August for the isolated village.

When she accepted the job, people said she was crazy, but Campbell has thrived on the Arctic adventure, embracing a different culture and climate with open arms.

“Every day is something new, something I haven’t witnessed before,” she said in an interview in Port Townsend.

When she arrived in Kivalina four months ago, there were 17 hours of daylight each day.

When she left Dec. 17, there were six minutes.

She has experienced temperatures of 40 below zero, scraped snowdrifts off the windows so she could see out of the house and survived a storm with 100-plus-mph winds that blew waves over the narrow reef and the village airstrip.

Kivalina is one of the coast villages whose existence is threatened by global warming, she explained. In the past, an ice wall formed high enough to block waves from engulfing the reef.

Living in a village that clings to survival has taught her what’s important and what you can live without, Campbell said.

“I’ve learned to be humble,” she said.

“We’re so spoiled in the lower 48 states.”

[...]

 

Campbell posts photos and entries on her blog st

http://katie2ak.tumblr.com/

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Carving stone deposits found near Iqaluit

Carving stone deposits found near Iqaluit | Inuit Nunangat Stories | Scoop.it

Carving stone is a catchall term used by most sculptors for metamorphic rock such as soapstone, marble and alabaster, according to Mate. The deposits found on the Hall Peninsula are a wide range of different rocks of the serpentine group with colours from apple and olive green to dark aquamarine.

Carving stone is formed when hot fluids flow through iron-and magnesium-rich rock deep in the Earth's crust, altering it into softer minerals. At one time, Hall Peninsula used to be one of the world's biggest mountain belts, which has now eroded away.

"When you're walking around there, you're walking 30 kilometres deep into a mountain so you're looking at the deeper crust in this part of the world," said Mate, a self-described geology geek. "That's why we're finding carving stone.

"Every night there were exciting conversations about rocks that were found and what they mean and how that might change the interpretation of how the land formed."

 

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"The data we produce is useful for a whole range of stakeholders," said Mate. "It's an important resource for Nunavummiut and, of course, carvers."

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Acclaimed Inuit artist Annie Pootoogook's life again runs off rails again

Acclaimed Inuit artist Annie Pootoogook's life again runs off rails again | Inuit Nunangat Stories | Scoop.it
They came to this newspaper last July, looking for help because a baby was on the way and they needed their own place after living outdoors and in shelters for more than a year.
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"...on Friday, outside the Ottawa Mission where she often goes for meals, Pootoogook revealed she is through with Watt and expects she will never be reunited with her baby. Pootoogook thinks the child will be put up for adoption. She also admitted the drinking never stopped, and both she and Watt continued to take drugs.

The story gets worse.

Earlier this month, as they were drinking red wine in their apartment, Watt suddenly flew into a drunken rage and beat her up.

Watt was sentenced to 45 days in jail for assault, and though police would not identify the victim, Pootoogook says it was her. Pootoogook says he punched her in the face at least six times and knocked her unconscious. A neighbour who heard the ruckus called police. She says she came to when they arrived. Blood was streaming from her nose. Police had her examined in hospital. Friends and a relatives who saw Pootoogook a few weeks ago say she had at least one black eye and other facial bruises...."

Read more: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/Adami+Acclaimed+Inuit+artist+life+again+runs+rails/7754420/story.html#ixzz2GW81isRU 10
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Royal Canadian Mint Honours Canadian Inuit Art With Joannassie Nowkawalk Owl Shaman Fine Gold Coin

Royal Canadian Mint Honours Canadian Inuit Art With Joannassie Nowkawalk Owl Shaman  Fine Gold Coin | Inuit Nunangat Stories | Scoop.it

Today at the Winnipeg Art Gallery, the Royal Canadian Mint unveiled a 99.99% fine gold collector coin with a 50-cent face value honouring Canadian Inuit Art.

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"The Royal Canadian Mint is proud to celebrate Canada's history, culture and values with special collector coins," said Ian E. Bennett, President and CEO of the Royal Canadian Mint. "This gold coin honours Canadian Inuit art through an intricate design inspired by the original carving of Inuit artist Joannassie Nowkawalk, Owl Shaman holding Goose, part of the Winnipeg Art Gallery's world-class contemporary Inuit art collection."

The coin's reverse design of the owl's round and compact shape conveys the solid physique, adaptations and strength that are essential to surviving in the Arctic while the captured goose reveals the owl's prowess as a hunter.

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