Supporting STEM in Remote Regions
More students in remote, rural, and Indigenous communities in Canada will have opportunities to become proficient in science, technology, engineering,...
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In 2010, Labrador endured what became known as the “Year of No Winter.” Temperatures were between eight and ten degrees warmer than usual. Three hundred millimetres of rain fell in February.
The sea ice—the winter highway used for centuries by Inuit for hunting and travelling— formed imperfectly, when it finally formed at all. It’s estimated that one in twelve people fell through the ice on their snowmobiles. Things had been increasingly strange for years. Every winter, it seemed, the sea ice formed a little later and thawed a little earlier.
