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The Arctic's indigenous people have a long relationship with its icy conditions, and face the loss of their cultural heritage. Further, there are numerous implications which go beyond the Arctic region. Sea ice loss not only enhances warming in the Arctic but also adds to global temperature increase through the ice-albedo feedback.
Arctic amplification of climate change has impacted Arctic ecology by melting sea ice, [58] decreasing the salinity of Arctic waters, [59] altering ocean currents and water temperatures, [57] and increasing precipitation, all of which could potentially lead to a disruption of thermohaline circulation. [60]
Eastern Arctic Small Tool Tradition groups c. 3000 – 500 BCE; Independence I culture; Northern Greenland and the Canadian Arctic between 2400 and 1000 BCE. This Paleo-Eskimo culture was named after Independence Fjord, where traces of a large settlement were found. Their lodgings were erected on elliptical foundations centred upon box-shaped ...
The Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, published in 2004, can be considered the key inspiration for the various national Arctic action plans [6]. Headed by the Arctic Council and the non-governmental International Arctic Science Committee , with the collaboration of hundreds of scientists [ 9 ] , it represents the first important evaluation of ...
The human-ecological systems in the North, like reindeer pastoralism, are sensitive to change, perhaps more than in virtually any other region of the globe, due in part to the variability of the Arctic climate and ecosystem and the characteristic ways of life of Indigenous Arctic peoples.
The AST consisted of several Paleo-Eskimo cultures, including the Independence cultures and Pre-Dorset culture. [3] [4] The Dorset culture (Inuktitut: Tuniit or Tunit) refers to the next inhabitants of central and eastern Arctic. The Dorset culture evolved because of technological and economic changes during the period of 1050–550 BCE.
Category:Culture of the Arctic only covers the area north of the Arctic Circle (66° 33’N). Articles that fall outside of this definition should not be included in this category. Arctic explains the various definitions of Arctic.
Climate change in Greenland is affecting the livelihood of the Greenlandic population. Geographically Greenland is situated between the Arctic and the Atlantic Ocean, with two thirds of the island being north of the Arctic Circle. [1] Since the middle of the 20th century, the Arctic has been warming at about twice the global rate.