ABSTRACT. A combination of paleoclimatic proxies, zooarchaeological data from historic Inuit habitation sites, and Geographic Information System (GIS) studies of modern sea-ice extremes were used to track the changing size and shape in modern times of a polynya situated in outer Frobisher Bay, Baffin Island. From these data, inferences were drawn about historic Inuit settlement patterns and subsistence strategies in the region over the last 500 years. Results of the analysis show that during episodes of cooling temperatures and increased ice severity, the polynya decreases in size and is more localized in outer Frobisher Bay. During warmer periods, the polynya increases in size, extending its ice edge habitat significantly towards the head ...
The Baffin Island region in the eastern Canadian Arctic has recently experienced a rapid warming, po...
Baffin Bay hosts the largest and most productive of the Arctic polynyas: the North Water (NOW). Desp...
ABSTRACT. An archaeological sequence of Neo-Eskimo occupations, based upon ex-cavations of eight Thu...
In traditional Inuit society the availability of game resources must always have been one of the mos...
This paper examines Neo-Inuit (ca. AD 1250 to present) responses to the decreased temperatures of th...
Change in sea levels, be they isostatic or eustatic, impact humans and the paleogeography they inhab...
A combination of paleoclimatic proxies, zooarchaeological data from historic Inuit habitation sites,...
An archaeological sequence of Neo-Eskimo occupations, based upon excavations of eight Thule winter h...
A multidisciplinary study was undertaken at the Qijurittuq Site (IbGk-3) on Drayton Island in Low-Ar...
International Polar Year GeoArk Workshop on Climate, Environment and the Thule Culture in the Holoce...
ABSTRACT. Rare remains of postglacial bowhead whales occur in the Norwegian Bay–Eureka Sound region....
The Baffin Island region in the eastern Canadian Arctic has recently experienced a rapid warming, po...
Baffin Bay hosts the largest and most productive of the Arctic polynyas: the North Water (NOW). Desp...
ABSTRACT. An archaeological sequence of Neo-Eskimo occupations, based upon ex-cavations of eight Thu...
In traditional Inuit society the availability of game resources must always have been one of the mos...
This paper examines Neo-Inuit (ca. AD 1250 to present) responses to the decreased temperatures of th...
Change in sea levels, be they isostatic or eustatic, impact humans and the paleogeography they inhab...
A combination of paleoclimatic proxies, zooarchaeological data from historic Inuit habitation sites,...
An archaeological sequence of Neo-Eskimo occupations, based upon excavations of eight Thule winter h...
A multidisciplinary study was undertaken at the Qijurittuq Site (IbGk-3) on Drayton Island in Low-Ar...
International Polar Year GeoArk Workshop on Climate, Environment and the Thule Culture in the Holoce...
ABSTRACT. Rare remains of postglacial bowhead whales occur in the Norwegian Bay–Eureka Sound region....
The Baffin Island region in the eastern Canadian Arctic has recently experienced a rapid warming, po...
Baffin Bay hosts the largest and most productive of the Arctic polynyas: the North Water (NOW). Desp...
ABSTRACT. An archaeological sequence of Neo-Eskimo occupations, based upon ex-cavations of eight Thu...