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| Our taxi from Kugluktuk Airport to the CCGS Louis S. St. Laurent. |
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| A view of the Louis from the back seat of the helicopter. |
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| Kris and Will enjoying the warm weather with Kugluktuk in the background. |
| All photos by Rick Krishfield, WHOI |
Cruise - 2006 Dispatches
Calendar
Dispatch 1, August 5, 2006
By Rick Krishfield
Global Warming?
When we departed for the Arctic from Boston several days ago, it was
the hottest day since 2002 and the temperature exceeded 100 deg F (38 deg
C). Today, when we arrived in Kugluktuk, Nunavut, the temperature was an
all-time record for this day at this location, 77° F (25° C).
Ultimately, our studies of the Arctic Ocean are intended
to contribute knowledge on the mechanisms which drive the climate of the
Earth, including monitoring the effects of global warming -- but on days
like these I can’t help wondering if we are already too late.
Kris Newhall, Will Ostrom, and I make up the WHOI portion of an
international group of scientists who will be conducting oceanographic
studies in the Canadian Basin of the Arctic Ocean from the Canadian Coast
Guard Ice Breaker Louis S. St. Laurent as part of the JWACS 2006
cruise. Specifically, this is the fourth out of six years that we will be
conducting mooring and buoy deployments and recoveries as part of the BGEP. Other scientists from Canada, Japan, Alaska, New York, Denmark and
China will be conducting complementary research of the hydrography,
chemistry, biology, geophysics and bathymetry of this inadequately sampled
region of the Earth. In addition, this year we have an Inuit marine mammal
observer onboard to document the various wildlife that we will encounter.
Some of the scientists are already onboard, having joined the ship
previously in Resolute or Halifax. We are joining the ship in Kugluktuk (67° 49' N, 115° 09'W), while a television crew from the Canadian Broadcast Corporation is
offloaded after recording a documentary in preparation for the
International Polar Year, and simultaneously with changing of the
ship’s officers and crew.
Kugluktuk was formally known as Coppermine before the Nunavut Land
Claims Agreement settled the new territory of Nunavut in 1999. Sent by the
Hudson’s Bay Company to search the region for copper in the 1770s, Samuel
Hearne reached the mouth of the river where the small community of just over
1300 (mostly Inuit) now resides and named it Coppermine. After the Nunavut
Land Claims Agreement, the original spelling was intended to be
“Qurluqtuq” which means "the place of moving water" in the native
Inuinnaqtun language, to reflect its location near the river. However, the
spelling was fouled during the official naming process, since Kugluktuk
literally means "two startled people".
Actually, during this trip we never left the Kugluktuk Airport, but
were transported by the ship’s helicopter to the LSL which was anchored
just offshore. To see more photos of Kugluktuk, view the photos from the 2003 dispatch.
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