This paper examines vernacular weather observations amongst rural people on Sakhalin, Russia’s largest island on the Pacific Coast, and their relationship to the ice. It is based on a weather diary (2000–2016) of one of the local inhabitants and fieldwork that the author conducted in the settlement of Trambaus in 2016. The diary as a community-based weather monitoring allows us to examine how people understand, perceive and deal with the weather both daily and in the long-term perspective. Research argues that amongst all natural phenomena, the ice is the most crucial for the local inhabitants as it determines human subsistence activities, navigation and relations with other environmental forces and beings. People perceive the ice as having...
There is scientific consensus the archipelago of Svalbard warms up faster than other parts of the pl...
The rate of climate change in the Russian cold regions is nearly twice larger than the global‑mean r...
Significant climate change in the Arctic has been observed by indigenous peoples and reported in sci...
This paper examines vernacular weather observations amongst rural people on Sakhalin, Russia’s large...
This article focuses on the social representations of permafrost thaw among people who were born in ...
Assessing potential drivers of and linkages between sea ice retreat or thinning across Arctic Russia...
Changes with regard to climate and permafrost are giving rise to new, interrelated processes and str...
International audienceWhat are the links between mainstream climate science and local community know...
International audienceLiving in close relationship with the Siberian environment, for several decade...
The Indigenous village of Bykovskiy is located 40 km from Tiksi, the administrative center of Buluns...
Given current and projected warming trends in the Arctic and the important role played by subsistenc...
There is scientific consensus the archipelago of Svalbard warms up faster than other parts of the pl...
Sea ice loss is accelerating in the Barents and Kara Seas (BKS). Assessing potential linkages betwee...
There is scientific consensus the archipelago of Svalbard warms up faster than other parts of the pl...
The rate of climate change in the Russian cold regions is nearly twice larger than the global‑mean r...
Significant climate change in the Arctic has been observed by indigenous peoples and reported in sci...
This paper examines vernacular weather observations amongst rural people on Sakhalin, Russia’s large...
This article focuses on the social representations of permafrost thaw among people who were born in ...
Assessing potential drivers of and linkages between sea ice retreat or thinning across Arctic Russia...
Changes with regard to climate and permafrost are giving rise to new, interrelated processes and str...
International audienceWhat are the links between mainstream climate science and local community know...
International audienceLiving in close relationship with the Siberian environment, for several decade...
The Indigenous village of Bykovskiy is located 40 km from Tiksi, the administrative center of Buluns...
Given current and projected warming trends in the Arctic and the important role played by subsistenc...
There is scientific consensus the archipelago of Svalbard warms up faster than other parts of the pl...
Sea ice loss is accelerating in the Barents and Kara Seas (BKS). Assessing potential linkages betwee...
There is scientific consensus the archipelago of Svalbard warms up faster than other parts of the pl...
The rate of climate change in the Russian cold regions is nearly twice larger than the global‑mean r...
Significant climate change in the Arctic has been observed by indigenous peoples and reported in sci...