Living Arctic

Living Arctic
Author: Hugh Brody
Publsiher: Seattle : University of Washington Press ; Vancouver : Douglas & McIntyre
Total Pages: 254
Release: 1987
Genre: Canada, Northern
ISBN: 088894585X

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Text and photos portraying the diverse native peoples who live in the Canadian arctic. Includes chapters on stereotypes, peoples, cold, meat, animals, mobility, authority, children, language, tradition, frontiers, and the politics of survival.

Polar Tales

Polar Tales
Author: Fredrik Granath,Melissa Schaefer
Publsiher: Rizzoli Publications
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023-09-12
Genre: Photography
ISBN: 9780789341594

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The Arctic is the ground zero of climate change, and the polar bear is on the front line. Filled with groundbreaking photography that reveals the breathtaking landscapes of the Arctic and the transformations of the environment through the changing lives of polar bears, it's a firsthand report from the top of our planet. Polar Tales tells the story of an ice world in transformation and a planet nearing its tipping point--the moment when Earth's climate begins to change irreversibly. This book is both a celebration of the wildlife that inhabits this most unforgiving and beautiful environment imaginable--mountains, fjords, enormous glaciers, and the seemingly endless pack ice of the Arctic Ocean--and a cautionary tale of global warming. Rising temperatures have put the Arctic at risk, and the habitats--and lives--of the animals there are increasingly threatened. Set against the dramatic landscape of ice floes and ragged mountains, readers see how polar bears, foxes, seals, walruses, and reindeer now struggle to live in this vulnerable climate. Images of a polar bear mother as she takes her newborns out for their first hunt, a seal pup only hours old, and the spectacle of the polar night are reminders of what is at risk. The authors work like no other photographers: spending months in the field on their expeditions, they live among the polar bears, establishing an uneasy balance and unprecedented access to the world of the kings of the Arctic. Readers are rewarded with unique and stirring images that capture the harsh beauty of a world that few will experience firsthand.

Living in the Arctic

Living in the Arctic
Author: Allan Fowler
Publsiher: Childrens Press
Total Pages: 32
Release: 2001-03-01
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 0516270842

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Discusses people who live in the Arctic regions of the world and how it affects their lives.

What Lives in the Arctic

What Lives in the Arctic
Author: Oona Gaarder-Juntti
Publsiher: ABDO Publishing Company
Total Pages: 26
Release: 2008-08-15
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9781617862991

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This book includes an overview of the arctic as well as a map showing where it is located. Beautiful, rich, oversized photos enhance the pages along with basic information and an additional factoid about the specific animals living in the arctic.

Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Author: Subhankar Banerjee,Peter Matthiessen
Publsiher: Braided River
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2003
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9780898864380

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Photographic documentation of the necessity to preserve this precious area.

Living in the Arctic

Living in the Arctic
Author: Alicia Klepeis
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 32
Release: 2020
Genre: Arctic regions
ISBN: 1725316463

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The Arctic is a challenging but fascinating region. Often associated with igloos and polar bears, the Arctic is also home to millions of people who have rich cultural traditions and survival skills. This book describes the Arctic's landscape, climate, and wildlife, and the people who call the region home. Through vivid photographs and fun facts, young readers learn how life in the Arctic has changed over time and what the future holds for this unforgiving environment.

Arctic Life of Birds and Mammals

Arctic Life of Birds and Mammals
Author: L. Irving
Publsiher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9783642856556

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After travel through Alaska during the Second World War, in 1947 I went to Barrow with a very lively group of biologists. From their productive research developed the Arctic Research Laboratory. While we examined the rather surpris ingly modest metabolic rates of arctic warmblooded animals in cold, PER SCHO LANDER proposed and then carried out measurements of metabolism of some tropi cal animals in Panama. The differences could be formulated to show the basis of adaptation to arctic cold and to tropical warmth. Imagination and logic were required to formulate the comparison so that it could become a part of science, but the essential measurements were derived from animals and plants in their own arctic and tropical environments. Characteristics that adapt the forms of life to climatic conditions of various environments appear clear in the large dimensions of extremely differing climates. At the time of my arrival in Alaska many of the arctic Eskimos were still largely dependent on natural resources of their immediate and local environment, in which great seasonal changes in temperature and solar radiation appeared as dominant factors. The living environment on which they subsisted was also mar kedly affected by the changes of the seasons, in particular by the change in state of water to ice that terminated summer and by the melting that brought the late transition from winter to summer.

D lvi

D  lvi
Author: Laura Galloway
Publsiher: Atlantic Books (UK)
Total Pages: 300
Release: 2022-02-03
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 1911630687

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Part memoir, part travelogue, this is the story of one woman's six years living in a reindeer-herding village in the Arctic Tundra, forging a life on her own as the only American among one of the most unknowable cultures on earth. An ancestry test suggesting she shared some DNA with the Sámi people, the indigenous inhabitants of the Arctic tundra, tapped into Laura Galloway's wanderlust; an affair with a Sámi reindeer herder ultimately led her to leave New York for the tiny town of Kautokeino, Norway. When her new boyfriend left her unexpectedly after six months, it would have been easy, and perhaps prudent, to return home. But she stayed for six years. Dálvi is the story of Laura's time in a reindeer-herding village in the Arctic, forging a solitary existence as she struggled to learn the language and make her way in a remote community for which there were no guidebooks or manuals for how to fit in. Her time in the North opened her to a new world. And it brought something else as well: reconciliation and peace with the traumatic events that had previously defined her - the sudden death of her mother when she was three, a difficult childhood and her lifelong search for connection and a sense of home. Both a heart-rending memoir and a love letter to the singular landscape of the region, Dálvi explores with great warmth and humility what it means to truly belong.