2004
DOI: 10.14430/arctic514
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Observations on Shorefast Ice Dynamics in Arctic Alaska and the Responses of the Iñupiat Hunting Community

Abstract: ABSTRACT. Although shorefast sea ice forms a platform that facilitates travel, camping, and hunting by Iñupiat subsistence hunters and fishers in the western Arctic, the nearshore sea-ice zone remains an unforgiving and dynamic environment. Traditional hunters constantly hone site-specific experiences and skills with which to optimize the reward-to-risk ratio inherent in operating from this coastal ice. Nearshore ice conditions nevertheless can change suddenly, endangering even the most experienced subsistence… Show more

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Cited by 91 publications
(81 citation statements)
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“…The hunters' breadth of sea-ice knowledge is not less remarkable than that for walruses, and hunters' sea-ice terminologies also exceed the lexicon used by scientists (George et al, 2004;Nelson, 1969;Nichols et al, 2004;Oozeva et al, 2004). This attention to detail and hunters' localized perspective contrast strongly with the scientists' usual focus on larger-scale phenomena.…”
Section: Indigenous Hunters' Knowledgementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The hunters' breadth of sea-ice knowledge is not less remarkable than that for walruses, and hunters' sea-ice terminologies also exceed the lexicon used by scientists (George et al, 2004;Nelson, 1969;Nichols et al, 2004;Oozeva et al, 2004). This attention to detail and hunters' localized perspective contrast strongly with the scientists' usual focus on larger-scale phenomena.…”
Section: Indigenous Hunters' Knowledgementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It may most naturally come from cooperation over specific matters of high mutual concerns•for example, the ongoing shifts in walrus habitats due to sea ice and climate change, or the increased safety risks due to earlier ice break-ups and unstable winter ice cover. Such collaboration of two types of knowledge, from hunters and scientists, has already been sought in the studies of shore-fast ice dynamics, ice formation, sea-ice and weather observations (George et al, 2004;Nichols et al, 2004;Krupnik, 2002;Norton, 2002). In matching hunters' knowledge and scientists' perspectives, both sides will have to integrate the different temporal and spatial resolutions of their respective records.…”
Section: Scaling: How "Local" Is Local?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Let us consider two examples to illustrate this point. Multiyear sea ice (piqaluyak being an Inupiaq equivalent) helps ensure the stability of landfast ice (see Chapter 9 by Druckenmiller et al this volume) and provides a preferred source of freshwater to hunting crews on the ice and elders in the village (Nelson 1969;George et al 2004). Over the past two decades, access to multiyear ice in some Arctic locations, such as coastal Alaska, has become more difficult due to changes in Arctic ice circulation and dramatic loss of multiyear ice (Maslanik et al 2007).…”
Section: Is This a Good Spot? Lik And Study Site Selectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The dynamic and thermodynamic processes of landfast ice differ from drifting ice due to the effects of shallow bathymetry [Rheimnitz et al, 1978;Mahoney et al, 2007], tides, and nearshore currents [George et al, 2004;Petrich et al, 2012b], a fixed orientation to the sun, and perhaps most importantly, warm air and dust from nearby land . Furthermore, snow on landfast ice differs compositionally due to: (1) earlier freezeup of landfast ice, which allows more time for snow accumulation and snow metamorphosis, (2) its fixed alignment to the dominant wind direction, affecting snow redistribution, and (3) the relatively larger amount of ice deformation on a per area basis due to the concentrated compression of ice nearshore, which also affects snow redistribution.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%