Situated between Dease Strait and Queen Maud Gulf on the southeast coast of Victoria Island (Kitlineq), part of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, Cambridge Bay is a transportation and administrative centre for the Kitikmeot Region. To the north of the community is Ferguson Lake (Inuinnaqtun: Tahiryuaq or Tahikyoak) which flows into Wellington Bay via the Ekalluk River. The Ekalluk River is both an important commercial fishing and archaeological area, and of particular importance is the short section of the river known as Iqaluktuuq.
The Western Arctic has changed a lot in the last 10 years and there are many more changes to come in the future. When we were in Cambridge Bay (Iqaluktuuttiaq), Nunavut we noticed a booming tourism industry, a strong Inuit culture and we heard many plans for increased research and shipping in the area. Watch our video to learn more.
L'Arctique de l'Ouest a beaucoup changé dans les 10 derniers années, et encore plus de changements se produiront dans l'avenir. Lors de notre passage à Cambridge Bay (Iqaluktuuttiaq) au Nunavut, nous avons observé une industrie touristique prospère, une culture inuite bien ancrée et nous avons témoigné beaucoup de discussions au sujet d'une augmentation de recherche et de transport maritime dans la région. Visionnez la vidéo ci-dessous pour apprendre plus.
published: 14 Sep 2017
E7: Exploring Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, CANADA
#Cambridgebay #Nunavut #Evantures
published: 12 Dec 2017
Growing Up In Cambridge Bay
'Growing Up in Cambridge Bay' charts the experiences and lives of local youth in Cambridge Bay in the Arctic Circle. They document traditional fishing, hunting, Arctic sports, local legends on the origin of death and musical traditions such as throat singing.
Community elders from Cambridge Bay also perform drum dances and discuss their perspectives on a rapidly changing future for the community and their way of life. Their next video documents building a traditional kayak alongside their elders.
This film was made during a Participatory Video project undertaken by InsightShare as part of Conversations with the Earth (CWE) - a partnership through which InsightShare works with Indigenous communities to identify, train, and equip local videographers to enable them to record the impacts...
published: 08 Dec 2010
Google Maps goes to the Arctic community of Cambridge Bay
In August 2012, the residents of Cambridge Bay invited the Google Maps team to come help map their community. Residents attended a Map Up to update Google Maps through Map Maker and also got to take the Street View trike out for a spin to let the world see their world. Visit http://maps.google.com/help/maps/streetview/gallery/arctic/
published: 28 Nov 2012
BLAST! - Life in Cambridge Bay
Visit DevlinPix.com http://bit.ly/DevlinPix to see all our movies and videos!
BLAST! DVD http://bit.ly/9bS6yL
Trailer http://bit.ly/ccGAmS
After the BLAST telescope launched from Arctic Sweden, we knew only that it would land some where in Arctic Canada, but we didn't know where. I wanted to document the recovery, but where to fly to somewhere far above the Arctic Circle? Eventually, I just went to JFK Airport and waited for news of my destination...READ MORE: http://bit.ly/dKERDa Distributed by Tubemogul.
published: 20 Dec 2010
Cambridge Bay Explained
My channel is 1 year old now!! This is an interesting community in Canada #cambridgebay #canada #nunavut #victoriaisland #northwestterritories #geography #airports #aaronsgeographyworld #explainingcountries #amazing #arctic #finlaysonislands #cruiseships #cool #countrymaps #limberwiskmapping #Kitikmeot #inuktitut.
Limberwisk Mapping: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwzOmmwXYdoVcN7heED1acA
published: 07 Jun 2020
Teleport Update #11 - Cambridge Bay to Tuktoyaktuk - 2012
Onboard their little wooden 29 foot junk-rig yacht Teleport, Jess and Chris set sail from Cambridge Bay in the Canadian Arctic where they left their yacht frozen on a hillside for the winter, to sail onwards to Ulukhaktok (Holman), Banks Island, then Tuktoyaktuk on their Northwest Passage adventure.
published: 19 Jun 2013
Drone Footage of Cambridge Bay, Nunavut
This is a video created by the Municipality of Cambridge Bay to showcase some of the sights of Cambridge Bay.
The Western Arctic has changed a lot in the last 10 years and there are many more changes to come in the future. When we were in Cambridge Bay (Iqaluktuuttiaq),...
The Western Arctic has changed a lot in the last 10 years and there are many more changes to come in the future. When we were in Cambridge Bay (Iqaluktuuttiaq), Nunavut we noticed a booming tourism industry, a strong Inuit culture and we heard many plans for increased research and shipping in the area. Watch our video to learn more.
L'Arctique de l'Ouest a beaucoup changé dans les 10 derniers années, et encore plus de changements se produiront dans l'avenir. Lors de notre passage à Cambridge Bay (Iqaluktuuttiaq) au Nunavut, nous avons observé une industrie touristique prospère, une culture inuite bien ancrée et nous avons témoigné beaucoup de discussions au sujet d'une augmentation de recherche et de transport maritime dans la région. Visionnez la vidéo ci-dessous pour apprendre plus.
The Western Arctic has changed a lot in the last 10 years and there are many more changes to come in the future. When we were in Cambridge Bay (Iqaluktuuttiaq), Nunavut we noticed a booming tourism industry, a strong Inuit culture and we heard many plans for increased research and shipping in the area. Watch our video to learn more.
L'Arctique de l'Ouest a beaucoup changé dans les 10 derniers années, et encore plus de changements se produiront dans l'avenir. Lors de notre passage à Cambridge Bay (Iqaluktuuttiaq) au Nunavut, nous avons observé une industrie touristique prospère, une culture inuite bien ancrée et nous avons témoigné beaucoup de discussions au sujet d'une augmentation de recherche et de transport maritime dans la région. Visionnez la vidéo ci-dessous pour apprendre plus.
'Growing Up in Cambridge Bay' charts the experiences and lives of local youth in Cambridge Bay in the Arctic Circle. They document traditional fishing, hunting,...
'Growing Up in Cambridge Bay' charts the experiences and lives of local youth in Cambridge Bay in the Arctic Circle. They document traditional fishing, hunting, Arctic sports, local legends on the origin of death and musical traditions such as throat singing.
Community elders from Cambridge Bay also perform drum dances and discuss their perspectives on a rapidly changing future for the community and their way of life. Their next video documents building a traditional kayak alongside their elders.
This film was made during a Participatory Video project undertaken by InsightShare as part of Conversations with the Earth (CWE) - a partnership through which InsightShare works with Indigenous communities to identify, train, and equip local videographers to enable them to record the impacts of, and responses to, climate change at the local level. Creating and sharing these video stories enables Indigenous peoples to contemplate and present their own perspectives on the effects of climate change to inform the global discourse. This has also created an opportunity to share local adaptation strategies and build donor support for community-based adaptation. Indigenous videographers are training people from other communities, helping to create a regional and a global network of Indigenous communities working on these issues. Communities participating in CWE are creating their own media and linking up through the emerging media hub network.
Facilitated by InsightShare, May 2009
For more information:
www.insightshare.org
www.conversationsearth.org
'Growing Up in Cambridge Bay' charts the experiences and lives of local youth in Cambridge Bay in the Arctic Circle. They document traditional fishing, hunting, Arctic sports, local legends on the origin of death and musical traditions such as throat singing.
Community elders from Cambridge Bay also perform drum dances and discuss their perspectives on a rapidly changing future for the community and their way of life. Their next video documents building a traditional kayak alongside their elders.
This film was made during a Participatory Video project undertaken by InsightShare as part of Conversations with the Earth (CWE) - a partnership through which InsightShare works with Indigenous communities to identify, train, and equip local videographers to enable them to record the impacts of, and responses to, climate change at the local level. Creating and sharing these video stories enables Indigenous peoples to contemplate and present their own perspectives on the effects of climate change to inform the global discourse. This has also created an opportunity to share local adaptation strategies and build donor support for community-based adaptation. Indigenous videographers are training people from other communities, helping to create a regional and a global network of Indigenous communities working on these issues. Communities participating in CWE are creating their own media and linking up through the emerging media hub network.
Facilitated by InsightShare, May 2009
For more information:
www.insightshare.org
www.conversationsearth.org
In August 2012, the residents of Cambridge Bay invited the Google Maps team to come help map their community. Residents attended a Map Up to update Google Maps ...
In August 2012, the residents of Cambridge Bay invited the Google Maps team to come help map their community. Residents attended a Map Up to update Google Maps through Map Maker and also got to take the Street View trike out for a spin to let the world see their world. Visit http://maps.google.com/help/maps/streetview/gallery/arctic/
In August 2012, the residents of Cambridge Bay invited the Google Maps team to come help map their community. Residents attended a Map Up to update Google Maps through Map Maker and also got to take the Street View trike out for a spin to let the world see their world. Visit http://maps.google.com/help/maps/streetview/gallery/arctic/
Visit DevlinPix.com http://bit.ly/DevlinPix to see all our movies and videos!
BLAST! DVD http://bit.ly/9bS6yL
Trailer http://bit.ly/ccGAmS
After the BLAST t...
Visit DevlinPix.com http://bit.ly/DevlinPix to see all our movies and videos!
BLAST! DVD http://bit.ly/9bS6yL
Trailer http://bit.ly/ccGAmS
After the BLAST telescope launched from Arctic Sweden, we knew only that it would land some where in Arctic Canada, but we didn't know where. I wanted to document the recovery, but where to fly to somewhere far above the Arctic Circle? Eventually, I just went to JFK Airport and waited for news of my destination...READ MORE: http://bit.ly/dKERDa Distributed by Tubemogul.
Visit DevlinPix.com http://bit.ly/DevlinPix to see all our movies and videos!
BLAST! DVD http://bit.ly/9bS6yL
Trailer http://bit.ly/ccGAmS
After the BLAST telescope launched from Arctic Sweden, we knew only that it would land some where in Arctic Canada, but we didn't know where. I wanted to document the recovery, but where to fly to somewhere far above the Arctic Circle? Eventually, I just went to JFK Airport and waited for news of my destination...READ MORE: http://bit.ly/dKERDa Distributed by Tubemogul.
My channel is 1 year old now!! This is an interesting community in Canada #cambridgebay #canada #nunavut #victoriaisland #northwestterritories #geography #airpo...
My channel is 1 year old now!! This is an interesting community in Canada #cambridgebay #canada #nunavut #victoriaisland #northwestterritories #geography #airports #aaronsgeographyworld #explainingcountries #amazing #arctic #finlaysonislands #cruiseships #cool #countrymaps #limberwiskmapping #Kitikmeot #inuktitut.
Limberwisk Mapping: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwzOmmwXYdoVcN7heED1acA
My channel is 1 year old now!! This is an interesting community in Canada #cambridgebay #canada #nunavut #victoriaisland #northwestterritories #geography #airports #aaronsgeographyworld #explainingcountries #amazing #arctic #finlaysonislands #cruiseships #cool #countrymaps #limberwiskmapping #Kitikmeot #inuktitut.
Limberwisk Mapping: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwzOmmwXYdoVcN7heED1acA
Onboard their little wooden 29 foot junk-rig yacht Teleport, Jess and Chris set sail from Cambridge Bay in the Canadian Arctic where they left their yacht froze...
Onboard their little wooden 29 foot junk-rig yacht Teleport, Jess and Chris set sail from Cambridge Bay in the Canadian Arctic where they left their yacht frozen on a hillside for the winter, to sail onwards to Ulukhaktok (Holman), Banks Island, then Tuktoyaktuk on their Northwest Passage adventure.
Onboard their little wooden 29 foot junk-rig yacht Teleport, Jess and Chris set sail from Cambridge Bay in the Canadian Arctic where they left their yacht frozen on a hillside for the winter, to sail onwards to Ulukhaktok (Holman), Banks Island, then Tuktoyaktuk on their Northwest Passage adventure.
The Western Arctic has changed a lot in the last 10 years and there are many more changes to come in the future. When we were in Cambridge Bay (Iqaluktuuttiaq), Nunavut we noticed a booming tourism industry, a strong Inuit culture and we heard many plans for increased research and shipping in the area. Watch our video to learn more.
L'Arctique de l'Ouest a beaucoup changé dans les 10 derniers années, et encore plus de changements se produiront dans l'avenir. Lors de notre passage à Cambridge Bay (Iqaluktuuttiaq) au Nunavut, nous avons observé une industrie touristique prospère, une culture inuite bien ancrée et nous avons témoigné beaucoup de discussions au sujet d'une augmentation de recherche et de transport maritime dans la région. Visionnez la vidéo ci-dessous pour apprendre plus.
'Growing Up in Cambridge Bay' charts the experiences and lives of local youth in Cambridge Bay in the Arctic Circle. They document traditional fishing, hunting, Arctic sports, local legends on the origin of death and musical traditions such as throat singing.
Community elders from Cambridge Bay also perform drum dances and discuss their perspectives on a rapidly changing future for the community and their way of life. Their next video documents building a traditional kayak alongside their elders.
This film was made during a Participatory Video project undertaken by InsightShare as part of Conversations with the Earth (CWE) - a partnership through which InsightShare works with Indigenous communities to identify, train, and equip local videographers to enable them to record the impacts of, and responses to, climate change at the local level. Creating and sharing these video stories enables Indigenous peoples to contemplate and present their own perspectives on the effects of climate change to inform the global discourse. This has also created an opportunity to share local adaptation strategies and build donor support for community-based adaptation. Indigenous videographers are training people from other communities, helping to create a regional and a global network of Indigenous communities working on these issues. Communities participating in CWE are creating their own media and linking up through the emerging media hub network.
Facilitated by InsightShare, May 2009
For more information:
www.insightshare.org
www.conversationsearth.org
In August 2012, the residents of Cambridge Bay invited the Google Maps team to come help map their community. Residents attended a Map Up to update Google Maps through Map Maker and also got to take the Street View trike out for a spin to let the world see their world. Visit http://maps.google.com/help/maps/streetview/gallery/arctic/
Visit DevlinPix.com http://bit.ly/DevlinPix to see all our movies and videos!
BLAST! DVD http://bit.ly/9bS6yL
Trailer http://bit.ly/ccGAmS
After the BLAST telescope launched from Arctic Sweden, we knew only that it would land some where in Arctic Canada, but we didn't know where. I wanted to document the recovery, but where to fly to somewhere far above the Arctic Circle? Eventually, I just went to JFK Airport and waited for news of my destination...READ MORE: http://bit.ly/dKERDa Distributed by Tubemogul.
My channel is 1 year old now!! This is an interesting community in Canada #cambridgebay #canada #nunavut #victoriaisland #northwestterritories #geography #airports #aaronsgeographyworld #explainingcountries #amazing #arctic #finlaysonislands #cruiseships #cool #countrymaps #limberwiskmapping #Kitikmeot #inuktitut.
Limberwisk Mapping: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwzOmmwXYdoVcN7heED1acA
Onboard their little wooden 29 foot junk-rig yacht Teleport, Jess and Chris set sail from Cambridge Bay in the Canadian Arctic where they left their yacht frozen on a hillside for the winter, to sail onwards to Ulukhaktok (Holman), Banks Island, then Tuktoyaktuk on their Northwest Passage adventure.
Situated between Dease Strait and Queen Maud Gulf on the southeast coast of Victoria Island (Kitlineq), part of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, Cambridge Bay is a transportation and administrative centre for the Kitikmeot Region. To the north of the community is Ferguson Lake (Inuinnaqtun: Tahiryuaq or Tahikyoak) which flows into Wellington Bay via the Ekalluk River. The Ekalluk River is both an important commercial fishing and archaeological area, and of particular importance is the short section of the river known as Iqaluktuuq.