Snow-covered landscapes and the polar night: how life works in the northernmost city of Alaska
Categories: Nature | North America
By Pictolic https://mail.pictolic.com/article/snow-covered-landscapes-and-the-polar-night-how-life-works-in-the-northernmost-city-of-alaska.htmlAmerican photographer Mark Mahaney (Mark Mahaney) went to Utkiagvik is the northernmost city in Alaska, where the polar night lasts for almost three months, and snow covers all available areas.
Utkiagvik, formerly called Barrow, is the northernmost city in the state of Alaska, located about 500 kilometers north of the Arctic Circle. This is 54 square kilometers of permafrost and tundra, where about five thousand people live. There are no roads connecting the town to the rest of the state, and the majority of the population is made up of Inupiat Eskimos, traditionally engaged in hunting (particularly whaling) and fishing.
Every winter, there is a polar night — a period of continuous darkness. In Utkiagvik, it lasts for almost three months. The city comes to life in the warm season — a seasonal barge that transports heavy supplies and equipment begins to work in the settlement.
According to the photographer, indigenous people are already beginning to feel the effects of global warming. For example, whale hunting, which is a tradition of the Inupiatic culture, is under threat — the ice in the spring is no longer stable enough for hunters to pull the whale carcass out of the water. Oil production is also bad for the environment-not far from Utkiagvik is home to the Prudhoe Bay gas and oil field, one of the largest in North America.
To learn more about how life works in Alaska, you can buy a book by Mark Mahaney.
Keywords: Alaska | Arctic | Winter | Polar night | North | Cold
Post News ArticleRecent articles

How can I turn an ordinary, unremarkable black dress into a shiny, sparkling work of art without sewing rhinestones and covering it ...

We are all used to the fact that harems and concubines belong to the oriental flavor. Is such a thing possible in Europe, given the ...
Related articles

Among the Russian who migrated to the North, there existed legends about the mysterious people of the white-eyed Chud, who was ...

Eskimo custom of "aredirect", that is, the exchange of wives at the time, is rooted in antiquity. Scientists believe that it ...

Winter is behind us and in memory of it, we offer you to admire the snowy beauties of Northern Finland, against which fluffy cats ...
To gather the data for their new book, California-based husband-and-wife team Peter Mesel and Faith D'Aluisio spent a million ...