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Module 2 • Geology: A Time and Place


BackgroundBackground


dominant soil type in the Arctic. It, too, is melting. As it does, it releases carbon that has been stored for thousands of years, intensifying the effects of climate change.


Twenty-one thousand years ago, at the dawn of another period of climate change, North America’s first settlers became the ancestors of all indigenous groups on the continent. Over time, they flourished and migrated southward down the western coast and then back north along the eastern coasts. By then, as global temperatures increased, the ice sheets receded, adding their water to the ocean. Sea levels rose, submerging the land bridge and dividing North America from Eurasia.


Not all these settlers migrated south. The Inupiaq, along with several other distinct indigenous groups, are their descendents and today still call Beringia home. Consisting of portions of Alaska, Chukotka, and the Bering Strait, Beringia is part of the world’s Arctic zone. Many of the Native groups who live there, including the Inupiaq, share common cultural touchstones while maintaining independent cultures, languages, and traditions.


The Arctic is not an easy place to survive. Its temperatures plummet to subzero on a regular basis. In winter months, the sun does not break the horizon for days at a time. Under these circumstances, the early humans who flourished there developed a specialized dependence on the sea animals that provided food, clothing, shelter, and tools—as well as culture, religion, and ethics.


This traditional knowledge was passed down as a matter of survival from one generation to the next in the form of stories, legends, lore, and folk wisdom. It persists to this day, a vast storehouse of knowledge owned in common by the people.


Much of this knowledge concerns the basic requirements of hunting, cleaning, and storing food. Like all First Nations, the Inupiaq survived for thousands of years by living in balance with the natural world, extracting their means of survival directly from the land. The annual migratory patterns of animals, birds, and fish are predictable behavior that a wise hunter exploits to feed the community.


In addition to fish and small animals, the Inupiaq hunters have access to large sea mammals like walrus and whale. Hunting this game requires cooperation both in the hunt and in the consumption of the spoils. In the process, the ethics of collaboration and mutual aid are born. At the same time, there is little room for error in a climate where subzero temperatures and dangerous sea ice are daily facts. Traditional knowledge is the vital tool to ensure survival through such conditions.


Today, the earth is experiencing climate change on the same scale that it did during the last ice age. Industrial processes that use coal, oil, gasoline, and other fossil fuels have added heat-trapping gases like carbon dioxide to the earth’s atmosphere. On average, the climate is warming—but that average masks “hot spots” where climate change is taking place at an accelerated rate. The Arctic is one such place.


A variety of factors explain this rapid pace of change. Feedback loops contribute to it. For example, as ice and snow cover melts, the exposed land soaks up more heat, thereby increasing the rate of snow melt.


Moreover, global warming does not necessarily translate into a simple warming effect. Scientists increasingly use the phrase climate chaos to describe the day-to-day impact of warming. Simply put, predictable weather patterns that have remained unchanged for centuries are no longer reliable. Periods of warming, intensified storms, increased snowfall, unpredictable weather events: These are the new “normal” of our weather patterns in a changing climate.


In the Arctic, climate chaos has thrown the traditional Inupiaq culture into a new period of rapid change. Although the Inupiaq have embraced change in some areas over the centuries, adopting technology like the snowmobile, motorboat, and Global Positioning System (GPS), the culture has continued to rely to a large degree on traditional foods.


As the climate changes, the Inupiaq are finding it hard to gather the foods that make up that diet. PolarHusky.com © NOMADS Online Classroom Expeditions GoNorth! Beringia 2011 Curriculum 5


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