M’Clintock Channel Polar Research Cabins is a collaboration between Gjoa Haven Hunters and Trappers Organization and Queen’s University in Canada.
The M’Clintock Polar Research Cabins are situated along the coast of M’Clintock Channel (68°37’ N, 95°52’ W), Nunavut in Canada. The nearest community is Uqsuqtuuq (Gjoa Haven) in the Kitikmeot region of Nunavut.
Grey colours are WMO Climate Normals including maximum and minimum values. Blue colours are individual years.
Climate data for the stations where extracted via Copernicus Climate Data Store, from the global gridded reanalysis product: ERA5 monthly averaged data on single levels from 1940 to present. Description and source code: Roemer J.K. 2023. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10214922 Data Source: Hersbach et al. 2023. Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) Climate Data Store (CDS), https://doi.org/10.24381/cds.f17050d7
In biological science, M’Clintock Channel is possibly most famous for its polar bears. The M’Clintock Channel sub-population estimate is 284 polar bears, based on mark-recapture work completed in 2000. There is low harvest on the polar bears, and the population is thought to be increasing from reduced numbers. The area has the classic flora and fauna of this part of Nunavut, incl. ringed seals, geese, gulls, turns, waders (shorebirds), etc. The M’Clintock Channel is 274 km long, and between 105 to 209 km wide, making it one of the largest channels in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago.
The cabins are maintained by Gjoa Haven Hunters and Trappers Association, and the research is run in collaboration with Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada. The community of Gjoa Haven has made significant steps in compiling local Inuit knowledge regarding polar bears. A critical part of this work has been the use of the Hunter and Trapper Organization cabins on the coast of M’Clintock Channel. These cabins are critical staging points for the extensive sea-ice work involved in the polar bear surveys and the collection of Traditional Ecological Knowledge on polar bears. In 2009-10, the Canadian government’s Arctic Research Infrastructure Fund allocated finances to refurbish and upgrading the cabins for scientific and traditional research on polar bear and other wildlife in the region.
Polar bear research made by scientists supplemented with traditional Inuit knowledge has been the focus of the research at the M’Clintock Channel Research Cabins. For more information, please contact the Gjoa Haven Trappers and Hunters Association.
The nearest community is Uqsuqtuuq (Gjoa Haven), a hamlet with a primarily Inuit population of over 1100 people. Gjoa Haven has two grocery stores, a hotel, a police station, a fire department, and a health care facility, as well as local administration offices.
Gjoa Haven has a small airport and an annual sealift. Flight connections are to Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, and destinations in Nunavut, such as Cambridge Bay.