91亚色

Skip to main content Skip to local navigation

Kathy Young leads fellow scientists on an Arctic adventure

On Aug. 12, Kathy Young led 69 Arctic hydrologists, oceanographers and observers聽from every circumpolar nation on an expedition to Baffin Island. As chief delegate of the invitation-only , the Arctic hydrologist and 91亚色 geography professor had been planning this seven-day conference for two years. Veteran scientists, their graduate students and a few observers assembled at Trudeau Airport in Montreal, flew to Iqaluit, Nunavut,聽then boarded the Lyubov Orlova, a Russian ship chartered by to give the group a tour of the Eastern Arctic while hosting its biennial conference. 91亚色 communications officer Martha Tancock and professional photographer documented the trip. In the first of two instalments, read and see images of their arrival in Iqaluit, the first iceberg sightings, an excursion to historic Kekerten whaling station and a meeting with Pangnirtung, Nunavut,聽elders about climate change.

Day 1 鈥 Arrival in Iqaluit
Wednesday, Aug. 12

Montreal was so hot and humid the morning of our departure, that it was hard to imagine that in less than three hours, First Air would jet us into overcast, misty weather almost 20 degrees cooler. As the First Air jet lifted off from Trudeau Airport and climbed to 31,000 feet, we left聽behind a suburban landscape dotted with turquoise pools and flew up the middle of Quebec following sandy oxbow rivers into a聽roadless, lake-studded green and grey expanse of Canadian Shield.

Not long after sampling Arctic char, we landed in Iqaluit, 鈥減lace of many fish鈥 and capital of Nunavut. The modular airport tower was a beacon of orange against a grey sky. Two school buses took us to the local museum where Earle Baddaloo, Nunavut鈥檚 assistant deputy minister of environment, welcomed us and urged us to taste muskox burgers and visit the 鈥渧ery striking and very northern鈥 Legislative Assembly, which we did. Top of his mind was the European Union鈥檚 decision to ban seal. The people of Nunavut 鈥渁re not going to sit back and sulk鈥 but will search for alternative markets, he insisted. Also greeting us was Mary Ellen Thomas, executive director of the Nunavut聽Research Institute, which supports 150 social, natural and health science research projects in the north.

After CBC North interviewed 91亚色 geography Professor Kathy Young about the conference, we toured Nunavut's Legislative Assembly, an airy igloo-shaped chamber built of British Columbia pine and decorated聽with Inuit prints, weaving and carvings, including a mace fashioned from a narwhal tusk. Our tour guide was Sean茅 d鈥橝rgencourt (right), the first page from Nunavut to serve in Canada鈥檚 House of Commons.

The bumpy ride to the harbour took us past the聽dump, stacks of crushed cars and mounds of used tires 颅鈥 a sight common to聽communities perched on impenetrable permafrost. At the water, we pulled on raincoats for our first聽spurt聽in inflated rubber Zodiacs to the waiting Lyubov Orlova. The ship is named after the Marilyn Monroe of the early Russian screen. Lyubov is Russian for 鈥渓ove鈥 so we were sailing on the love boat聽out of聽Frobisher Bay.

Day 2 鈥 Icebergs
Thursday, Aug. 13

At 7:05am, the voice of Cruise North expedition leader Jason crackled across public announcement speakers in each cabin. He listed longitude and latitude coordinates, temperature and weather conditions. Breakfast would be served at 7:30. To port, he added, you will see icebergs. Sure enough, through my porthole I spotted a compact blue-veined berg, then another. Many of us clamoured聽on deck for a better view.

Conference delegates gathered for a packed agenda of聽presentations in the forward lounge.聽Mid-morning, while they聽heard about聽snow modelling and the challenges involved in measuring snow cover, depth and density, I聽visited the ship's bridge.聽Here taciturn Russian naval officers monitored radar, compasses and other wayfinding instruments to navigate safely through treacherous northern waters.聽After a while, one聽pointed over the bow. 鈥淚zeboorg,鈥 he said. Through聽impenetrable fog, a faint grey horizontal line slowly emerged, then聽defining edges and finally聽the entire聽monster. Despite being the size of Toronto's downtown core, it moved with聽enough speed to create a headwind that blew the snow off its saddleback.

Stealthy and fast, it was easy to imagine how it could take a captain by surprise in the middle of the north Atlantic at night.聽In fact, one delegate聽guessed it had calved from the Jakobshavn Glacier in Greenland, the same one that spawned the iceberg that sunk the Titanic.

Meanwhile, the conference turned its focus on聽the effect of聽earlier ice breakups and later freeze-ups on Arctic lakes and rivers. The day was capped with聽a keynote talk by Robie Macdonald, research scientist at Fisheries聽& Oceans Canada's Institute of Ocean Sciences. Internationally recognized for his work on contaminant transport in oceans, he contributed to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former US vice-president Al Gore. Macdonald was invited to this conference to share an oceanographer鈥檚 perspective 鈥 a major goal of the conference 鈥 of what happens when freshwater聽runoff from land and melting sea ice聽interact with聽currents in the Pacific, Arctic聽and Atlantic oceans. Will the Arctic Sea become a seasonably open ocean?聽Yes.聽By 2013? He's not sure.聽(Read more in his International Polar Year聽.)

Day 3聽鈥 Bones to see and to pick
Friday, Aug. 14

In the Arctic we must be flexible, say our Cruise North hosts. An unexpected detour overnight meant the 5am trek to the Kekerten Island whaling station would be postponed to 11am. Without missing a beat, hydrologists and oceanographers gave scheduled talks on the rapid rate of sea-ice shrinkage, tracing the route of fresh meltwater from Greenland into the north Atlantic and changes in ice cover in the Baltic Sea.

At 10:30am, we donned rain gear and rubber boots, packed hiking boots and cameras, for an excursion to Kekerten, an abandoned whaling station. Before we could land, guides armed with rifles scouted the area for polar bears. All clear, we scurried ashore and followed聽boardwalks to historical plaques and skeletal remains of all sorts 鈥 a building, rusty vats, a whale鈥檚 giant skull and 100-year-old human bones scattered around聽their weathered wooden coffins. Off the beaten path, we bounced like moonwalkers across spongy tundra 鈥 a blanket of green moss, white and yellow lichen, and fluffy, white cotton grass聽鈥 and climbed craggy rocks coated in聽the black tripe de roche lichen that ill-fated 19th-century British explorer John Franklin's starving men ate and crawling with聽the witchy fingers of Arctic willow, to get a better view of a calm, misty Cumberland Sound.聽聽

Later, we visited Pangnirtung for a meeting between scientists and village elders, an anticipated highlight of the trip. In June 2008, the village declared a state of emergency after a flash flood knocked out two bridges and carved a channel through permafrost down to the bedrock. Through a translator, nine elders talked about this and other local signs of climate change聽鈥 glaciers disappearing in Cumberland Sound, high tides, moss washing into the sea. Scientists said permafrost is melting, glaciers are shrinking, sea ice is disappearing, water levels are rising, winds are changing and rivers are flooding around the circumpolar North. Both elders and scientists聽shared the opinion that聽we must all adapt to climate change.

Back on board Lyubov Orlova, the crew briefed us about the next day鈥檚 excursion聽鈥 a hike to Auyuittuq National Park in the stunning Pangnirtung Fiord (right). Read about it in YFile's聽next issue.