Alaska indigenous people see culture slipping away as sea ice vanishes
by Oliver Milman from on (#25TTR)
In a year almost certain to be history's hottest, drastic environmental changes are taking a toll on food supply and even language in Arctic communities
The extreme warmth of 2016 has changed so much for the people of the Arctic that even their language is becoming unmoored from the conditions in which they now live.
The Yupik, an indigenous people of western Alaska, have dozens of words for the vagaries of sea ice, which is not surprising given the crucial role it plays in subsistence hunting and transportation. But researchers have noted that some of these words, such as "tagneghneq" (thick, dark, weathered ice), are becoming obsolete.
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