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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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Russia explores old nuclear waste dumps in Arctic

Russia explores old nuclear waste dumps in Arctic | Inuit Nunangat Stories | Scoop.it

"...Russia's drive for Arctic oil and gas is complicated by the presence of old nuclear waste dumps in the Kara Sea. 

The toxic legacy of the Cold War lives on in Russia's Arctic, where the Soviet military dumped many tonnes of radioactive hardware at sea.

For more than a decade, Western governments have been helping Russia to remove nuclear fuel from decommissioned submarines docked in the Kola Peninsula - the region closest to Scandinavia.

But further east lies an intact nuclear submarine at the bottom of the Kara Sea, and its highly enriched uranium fuel is a potential time bomb.

This year the Russian authorities want to see if the K-27 sub can be safely raised, so that the uranium - sealed inside the reactors - can be removed.

They also plan to survey numerous other nuclear dumps in the Kara Sea, where Russia's energy giant Rosneft and its US partner Exxon Mobil are now exploring for oil and gas. ... Secret dumps

On the western flank is a closed military zone - the Novaya Zemlya archipelago. It was where the USSR tested hydrogen bombs - above ground in the early days.

Besides K-27, official figures show that the Soviet military dumped a huge quantity of nuclear waste in the Kara Sea: 17,000 containers and 19 vessels with radioactive waste, as well as 14 nuclear reactors, five of which contain hazardous spent fuel. Low-level liquid waste was simply poured into the sea...."

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Northern_Clips's insight:

"...As if to underline the strategic priorities, Russia is boosting its military presence in the Arctic and the Northern Fleet is getting a new generation of submarines, armed with multiple nuclear warheads...."

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