Dylan Clark /channels/taxonomy/term/4066/all en Socioeconomics play key role in Arctic Search and Rescue /channels/news/socioeconomics-play-key-role-arctic-search-and-rescue-263167 <p><span>Traveling and harvesting on the land and sea is of vital importance to Indigenous communities in the Canadian Arctic and subarctic, with links to food security, cultural identity, and wellbeing. A new study by the Climate Change Adaptation Research Group at ƻԺ however, finds that economic transitions, social shifts, and climate change are dramatically affecting the safety of Inuit during these activities.</span></p> <p><img align="right" src="//www.mcgill.ca/newsroom/files/newsroom/arctic0.jpg" style="padding-right:10px; padding-bottom:10px; padding-top:10px" /></p> Fri, 30 Sep 2016 17:29:58 +0000 webfull 121734 at /channels How to build an igloo /channels/news/how-build-igloo-263899 <p>When building an igloo for six hours in minus 54 degrees, Dylan Clark adheres to this ratio: For every second his hand is exposed to the cold, it takes 10 minutes back in the glove to warm it. “It’s hard to describe how cold it is,” he says of the northernmost Canadian Arctic. <strong>Dylan Clark</strong> is a master’s student working with the Climate Change Adaptation Research Group at ƻԺ. <br /> Read more: <a href="http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/10/igloo-inuit-arctic-nunavut/">National Geographic</a></p> Wed, 02 Nov 2016 18:12:43 +0000 webfull 122663 at /channels