The Arctic is warming quickly, faster than other places on Earth. Inuit people who live there have been noticing the change. Because their culture is adapted to the Arctic’s cold climate, global warming is making it difficult for Inuit people to continue their traditions. Here are a few of their observations in their own word:
Like the comments above, a lot of the observations that the Inuit recorded were things that had a negative impact. They reported an increase in sunburns and a decrease in their ability to predict the weather, for example. Some of their observations were positive. With the warmer climate, animals that usually live further south have moved further north and these species can be new food sources for the Inuit, for example. What do these changes to the environment mean for the Inuit way of life? “Inuit are going to have to find new ways to make a living from the land,” said Jose A. Kusugak, a Canadian Inuit. He continued that, “our millennia-old traditions are already being altered because of the warming Arctic, and we face the possibility of having to completely reinvent what it means to be Inuit. This is a prospect we fear.” |
The Cryosphere and Climate Change
Inuit Culture, Traditions and History
Unikaaqatigiit: Putting the Human Face on Climate Change – Perspectives from the Inuit in Canada (pdf)
Page created June 5, 2007 by Lisa Gardiner.
The source of this material is Windows to the Universe, at http://www.windows.ucar.edu/ at the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR). © The Regents of the University of Michigan. Windows to the Universe® is a registered trademark of UCAR. All Rights Reserved. Site policies and disclaimer

