Future Arctic Field Notes from a World on the Edge
In one hundred years, or even fifty, the Arctic will look dramatically different than it does today. As polar ice retreats and animals and plants migrate northward, the arctic landscape is morphing into something new and very different from what it once w
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		    FUTURE ARCTIC Edward Struzik
 
 Future Arctic
 
 Future Arctic Field Notes from a World on the Edge
 
 Edward Struzik
 
 Washington | Covelo | London
 
 Copyright © 2015 Edward Struzik All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the publisher: Island Press, 2000 M Street, NW, Suite 650, Washington, DC 20036 Island Press is a trademark of The Center for Resource Economics. Library of Congress Control Number: 2014948287 Printed on recycled, acid-free paper Manufactured in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
 
 Keywords: Arctic Council, Peace-Athabasca delta, avian cholera, Bering Sea, British Columbia, cackling goose, Canada goose, caribou, Chinchaga fire, Chukchi Sea, Churchill, cod, Ellef Ringnes, Exxon Valdez, Greenland, grizzly bear, Hudson Bay, hybridization, Ice Age, Inuit, Mackenzie delta, narwhal, Norwegian Polar Institute, ocean current, orca, peregrine falcon, polar bear, salmon, Shishmaref, snow goose, snowy owl, Svalbard, Tuktoyaktuk, wolf, wood bison, Yukon Territory
 
 To my wife, Julia, and to my children, Jacob and Sigrid, who have participated in a number of my Arctic expeditions. Those are the journeys north that I treasure most. To the people who live in the Arctic, my thanks for your hospitality and for sharing your insights.
 
 Contents
 
 Introduction Chapter 1:
 
 1 Eight-Foot-Long Beavers, Scimitar Cats, and Woolly Mammoths: What the Past Tells Us about the Future Arctic
 
 11
 
 Chapter 2:
 
 Oil and Ice
 
 25
 
 Chapter 3:
 
 The Arctic Ocean: A Sleeping Giant Wakes Up
 
 43
 
 Chapter 4:
 
 Stormy Arctic: The New Normal
 
 59
 
 Chapter 5:
 
 The Arctic Melting Pot
 
 75
 
 Chapter 6:
 
 Lords of the Arctic No More
 
 89
 
 Chapter 7:
 
 Caribou at the Crossroads
 
 109
 
 Chapter 8:
 
 Paradise Lost
 
 129
 
 Chapter 9:
 
 Drill, Baby, Drill
 
 143
 
 Chapter 10: The Need for an Arctic Treaty
 
 165
 
 Chapter 11: Conclusion
 
 181
 
 Acknowledgments
 
 195
 
 About the Author
 
 199
 
 150
 
 180
 
 n tia eu Al
 
 North Pacific
 
 150
 
 Islands
 
 r il I Ku
 
 PetropavlovskKamchatskiy
 
 Bering Sea
 
 Ocean
 
 slands
 
 Sakhalin
 
 Okhotsk Oymyakon
 
 Yu ko
 
 60
 
 Fairbanks
 
 lyma R. Ko
 
 a it
 
 Whitehorse
 
 UNI TED STATES n R.
 
 Khabarovsk
 
 Magadan
 
 g S tr rin Be
 
 Valdez
 
 Yukon–Kuskokwim Delta Anadyr’ Anchorage Providenlya Nome
 
 50
 
 Sea of Okhotsk Gulf of Alaska
 
 JAPAN
 
 Chukchi Pevek AR Cherskly CT Sea IC Yakutsk CI Barrow Wrangel R East Prudhoe Bay Island Verkhoyansk Siberian 120 Mackenzie Delta Sea Beaufort Sea Great Slave Great Bear Tuktoyaktuk Lake Lake Tiksi New Yellowknife Siberian Banks Ballast Brook Islands Athabasca Island Laptev Lake Victoria Sea Island Arctic Queen Borden Cambridge Island C A N A D A Bay Severnaya Ocean RUSSIA Elizabeth Ellef Ringnes Kangiqcliniq Zemlya Island Qausuittuq (Franklin Inlet) (Resolute) 90 W nisey R. 90 E Noril’sk Islands Ye North Hudson Ellesmere Repulse Pole Arctic Bay Island Dikson Bay Franz Bay Alert Josef Kara Baffin Qaanaaq Land Sea Island (Thule) Baffin Svalbard Nord Bay (NORWAY) Novaya Ob Zemlya Iqaluit		
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