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March/April 2021

pingo.

In Siberia, climate change is causing the ice-cored hills to explode, leaving massive craters behind. Are the landmarks in Tuktoyaktuk next?

PHOTO BY ANGELA GZOWSKI

March/April 2021

Drawing of a child.

From an attic in the Netherlands to Baker Lake in the ’60s—there’s a story behind each one of Gabriel Gély’s Inuit portraits.

PHOTO Courtesy Lambert van gils

March/April 2021

Students learning at Yukon University

Northerners have more post-secondary schooling options than ever before, but can a university system in the territories deliver on its promises?

PHOTO COURTESY YUKON UNIVERSITY/GBP Creative

March/April 2021

Anna Lambe dressed for her role as Sarah in Trickster

As a promising young actor, Anna Lambe says she’s grown along with the characters she plays.

Photo Steve Wilkie

March/April 2021

James Raffin poses outside

James Raffan’s latest book, the story of a polar bear and her cubs on a journey around Hudson Bay, is a call to action to reverse an ecological crisis. The scientist and storyteller has been exploring the Arctic for over four decades and has seen firsthand the devastation of climate change. Here’s why he hasn’t given up hope.

Photo: JASON VAN BRUGGEN

March/April 2021

SmartICE team pulling a sensor across the ice

As sea ice around the Arctic continues to recede, one company is combining traditional knowledge with cutting-edge technology to track its changes.

Photo by Michael Schmidt/Courtesy of SmartICE