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*This episode includes mentions of gendered medical abuse*.Last episode, we discussed the history of Sister Kate's children's home and the policy of forced removal of Aboriginal children from their families, which officially ended in the 70's and 80's, but in reality continues to this day through policing and carceral racism.Over the other side of the world, In Nunarput, or so called Greenland, the Inuit people are experiencing their own stolen generation through the continuing genocidal policies of their coloniser Denmark.The Inuit are Indigenous to several regions in the arctic including Nunarput, northern areas of Turtle Island and Chukotka north of Russia. Nunarput was formally colonised by the kingdom of Denmark and Norway in 1721, it was transferred to Danish rule when the kingdom separated in 1814. Nunarput officially ended its status as a colony of Denmark in 1953, and gained ‘home rule' in 1979 and a referendum in 2009 gave the island ‘self government'. However foreign policy, defense and security are still controlled by Denmark, and the government of Nunarput is still largely made up of Danish settlers.In this episode Mell speaks to Michael Bro, an Inuit and 2SLGBTQIA+ advocate who has been outspoken on issues concerning the rights of Inuit people across the arctic as well as his homeland of Nunarput.If you want to know more about Inuit struggles, follow Michael on instagram @michaelsevvv and check out the resources on his linktree.Check out the film ‘Orsugiak - Greenland's White Gold', a documentary by Inuit about the exploitation of Nunarput resources. - Link incoming* gofundme campaign to help bring Inuit kids back to their parents* Petition to bring Keira Kronvold's baby homeThis episode was made on Wurundjeri land, this land was invaded, stolen and remains under occupation. Colonial violence continues, as does Indigenous resistance.The Sunday Paper and Podcast remain independent, not for profit and reader and listener supported.Our theme music was made by DOBBYMatt Chun is our executive producer.The podcast is compiled, mixed and edited by me, Mell Chun. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thesundaypaperpodcast.substack.com/subscribe
El presidente de Rusia, Vladímir Putin, ha participado recientemente en la ceremonia de botadura del rompehielos de propulsión nuclear Chukotka. Por videoconferencia, el jefe del Kremlin ha celebrado la puesta en marcha de los planes de desarrollo de los territorios árticos y del aumento del tráfico de mercancías en la Ruta Marítima del Norte.
Beringsee – wo liegt das? Hört sich unspektakulär an, liegt aber weit weg – hinter Chukotka – quasi am anderen Ende der Welt. Im Beringmeer zwischen Sibirien und Alaska verläuft die Datumsgrenze. Richard Löwenherz, der ein gewisses Faible für Eis und Einsamkeit hat, hat es auf seiner Bikerafting-Reise in diesen entlegenen Landstrich Russlands geführt. Das Besondere in dieser Einsamkeit sind zweifelsfrei die Begegnungen: In absoluter Einsamkeit paddelt plötzlich die russische Extremreisende Marina Galkina vor ihm. Er trifft ein russisches Paar, das einen Katamaran selbst gebaut hat und auf einem spektakulären Weg das Land verlassen will. Und natürlich erlebt er die Lebenswelt vieler Einheimischer Sibiriens hautnah. Ganz ausführlich beschreibt Richard Löwenherz die Reise und die Begegnungen in seinem neuen Buch Mit Bike und Boot zur Beringsee. Es ist nach seinem erfolgreichen Buch Eis. Abenteuer. Einsamkeit das zweite Buch über eine seiner Extremreisen. Richard Löwenherz im web, auf instagram, auf YouTube
A team of Russian scientists recently examined something extremely unusual: the frozen body of a brown bear that lived thousands of years ago. The cold preserved the body almost perfectly in the frozen lands of eastern Siberia for almost 3,500 years. Maxim Cheprasov is the laboratory chief at the Lazarev Mammoth Museum Laboratory at the North-Eastern Federal University in Yakutsk, eastern Siberia. "This find is absolutely unique: the complete body of an ancient brown bear," he said. In 2020, reindeer herders found the female bear on an island in the Arctic Ocean. Part of the animal was sticking out of the frozen ground, or permafrost, on Bolshoy Lyakhovsky Island. The island is around 4,600 kilometers east of Moscow.一组俄罗斯科学家最近检查了一些非常不寻常的东西:一头生活在数千年前的棕熊的冰冻尸体。寒冷将尸体几乎完美地保存在西伯利亚东部的冰冻土地上近 3,500 年。马克西姆·切普拉索夫 (Maxim Cheprasov) 是位于西伯利亚东部雅库茨克的东北联邦大学拉扎列夫猛犸象博物馆实验室的实验室主任。 “这个发现绝对是独一无二的:一具古代棕熊的完整身体,”他说。 2020 年,驯鹿牧民在北冰洋的一个岛屿上发现了这只母熊。在 Bolshoy Lyakhovsky 岛上,这只动物的一部分从冻土或永久冻土中伸出来。该岛位于莫斯科以东约 4,600 公里处。Because it was found just east of the Bolshoy Etherican River, it has been named the Etherican brown bear.Low temperatures helped preserve the bear's soft tissue for 3,460 years. It also let the scientists know about its final meals - bird feathers and plants. The bear is 1.55 meters tall and weighs nearly 78 kilograms. "For the first time, a carcass with soft tissues has fallen into the hands of scientists, giving us the opportunity to study the internal organs and examine the brain," said Cheprasov. The scientific team in Siberia looked at the bear's brain, skin and internal organs so they could study its cells, genes, viruses and other organisms that lived inside it.因为它是在 Bolshoy Etherican 河以东发现的,所以被命名为 Etherican 棕熊。低温帮助熊的软组织保存了 3,460 年。它还让科学家们知道了它的最后一餐——鸟的羽毛和植物。这只熊身高1.55米,体重近78公斤。 Cheprasov 说:“这是第一次,带有软组织的尸体落入了科学家的手中,让我们有机会研究内脏和检查大脑。”西伯利亚的科学团队观察了这只熊的大脑、皮肤和内脏,以便研究它的细胞、基因、病毒和生活在它体内的其他生物。"Genetic analysis has shown that the bear does not differ in mitochondrial DNA from the modern bear from the north-east of Russia – Yakutia and Chukotka," Cheprasov said. He said the bear was about three to four years old when it died from an injury to its back. It is unclear how the bear came to be on the island, which is now divided from the mainland by a 50-kilometer-wide body of water. It may have crossed over ice, it might have swum over, or the island might still have been part of the mainland. The Lyakhovsky Islands contain some of the richest treasures in the world for the field of paleontology. The area attracts both scientists and ivory traders hunting for the remains of woolly mammoths, a kind of hairy elephant that disappeared long ago.“基因分析表明,这只熊的线粒体 DNA 与来自俄罗斯东北部的现代熊——雅库特和楚科奇熊没有区别,”Cheprasov 说。他说这只熊因背部受伤而死亡时大约三到四岁。目前尚不清楚这只熊是如何来到岛上的,该岛现在与大陆被 50 公里宽的水域隔开。它可能已经越过冰层,可能已经游过,或者该岛可能仍然是大陆的一部分。 Lyakhovsky 群岛拥有世界上古生物学领域最丰富的宝藏。该地区吸引了寻找猛犸象遗骸的科学家和象牙贸易商,猛犸象是一种很久以前就消失了的毛茸茸的大象。
El agua es uno de los grandes temas de nuestro tiempo; su gestión, su abundancia o escasez definen nuestra vida. Comunidades aisladas y urbes enteras por igual sufren debido a su relación con el agua. Pero si todo es agua, ¿por qué es cada vez más difícil acceder a ella? Estas y otras cuestiones vamos a tratar de desentrañar en este episodio. Mónica nos adentra en la interesante propuesta del ensayo Drenajes de Diego Rodríguez Landeros. Francisco recomienda el libro When the Whales Leave de Yuri Rytkheu, escritor chukchi de la región de Chukotka. En el episodio nos acompaña Nathalie Seguin, ingeniera física y activista por la gestión del agua en México.
unikkaat / unipkaat ungipaghat / nallunairutet Circumpolar Waves
Two years ago on August 9, 2020 we marked the International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples by launching our podcast which we call “ᐅᓂᒃᑳᑦ / UNIKKAAT / UNIPKAAT / UNGIPAGHAT / NALLUNAIRUTET / Circumpolar Waves”. In 2022 we are proud to mark this day with a special podcast to discuss the “Circumpolar Inuit Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement” – or EEE Protocols, released in June 2022. The 2018 ICC Utqiaġvik Declaration mandated ICC to facilitate the development of Equitable and Ethical protocols to aid creating a needed paradigm shift for our equitable involvement, for our Indigenous Knowledge to be involved and treated with trust and respect, and to put an end to top-down approaches often seen within international forums, research, decision and policymaking and many other places. The EEE Protocols are the result of many years of work and specifically over the past three years, Inuit from across Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and Chukotka have worked together to create this document. Across the Arctic there are important discussions about climate change, resource development, research, and wildlife management. At the international level, discussions on these topics and additional issues such as biodiversity, shipping, and food security are taking place that affect our way of life. Yet our communities and Knowledge are often not equitably involved in activities that impact us. The EEE Protocols provide a pathway to success for international organizations, researchers, decision and policy-makers. They are the terms by which Inuit expect to be engaged in.Our work was done primarily during global pandemic, and so we held many meetings via Zoom and a series of virtual workshops in the fall of 2021 to develop the EEE Protocols. In this podcast, host Dalee Sambo Dorough – former ICC Chair – speaks with four guests about the EEE Protocols: Kupik Kleist, President of ICC Greenland; Lisa Koperqualuk, President of ICC Canada, Liubov Taian former President of ICC Chukotka (interpretation by Teymur Suleyman); and Nicole Kanayurak Wojciechowski, Executive Council Member for ICC Alaska.The Circumpolar Inuit Protocols for Equitable and Ethical Engagement are available online here in an English language PDF: https://bit.ly/3zwNkHCThe drumming on this podcast is by the Barrow Dancers, from Utqiaġvik, Alaska.For more information about ICC, and to access the EEE Protocols check out the ICC websites. You can also go directly to iccalaska.org or find us on Facebook and Twitter.
Baby grey seals. Polar bears. Zooplankton on painkillers. How do toxic chemicals and substances end up in Arctic animals — and as it happens, native people, too? Our guests on today's show are Bjørn Munro Jenssen, an ecotoxicologist at NTNU, Jon Øyvind Odland, a professor of global health at NTNU and a professor of international health at UiT —The Arctic University of Norway, and Ida Beathe Øverjordet, a researcher at SINTEF.One of the most useful websites on arctic pollution is the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme, AMAP. Rachel Carson's book is Silent Spring.Here's a selection of articles from today's episode:Sørmo, E.G., Salmer, M.P., Jenssen, B.M., Hop, H., Bæk, K., Kovacs, K.M., Lydersen, C., Falk-Petersen, S., Gabrielsen, G.W., Lie, E. and Skaare, J.U. (2006), Biomagnification of polybrominated diphenyl ether and hexabromocyclododecane flame retardants in the polar bear food chain in Svalbard, Norway. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 25: 2502-2511. https://doi.org/10.1897/05-591RBourgeon, Sophie; Riemer, Astrid Kolind; Tartu, Sabrina; Aars, Jon; Polder, Anuschka; Jenssen, Bjørn Munro; Routti, Heli Anna Irmeli. (2017) Potentiation of ecological factors on the disruption of thyroid hormones by organo-halogenated contaminants in female polar bears (Ursus maritimus) from the Barents Sea. Environmental Research. vol. 15Nuijten, RJM; Hendriks, AJ; Jenssen, Bjørn Munro; Schipper, AM. (2016) Circumpolar contaminant concentrations in polar bears (Ursus maritimus) and potential population-level effects. Environmental Research. vol. 151.Chashchin, Valery; Kovshov, Aleksandr A.; Thomassen, Yngvar; Sorokina, Tatiana; Gorbanev, Sergey A.; Morgunov, Boris; Gudkov, Andrey B.; Chashchin, Maxim; Sturlis, Natalia V.; Trofimova, Anna; Odland, Jon Øyvind; Nieboer, Evert. (2020) Health risk modifiers of exposure to persistent pollutants among indigenous peoples of Chukotka. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (IJERPH). vol. 17 (1). See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This show features an interview with Efraim (Froyim) Kessler, who, at age 105, is the oldest person ever interviewed on The Yiddish Voice. In the interview Kessler, who was born in Bilgoray, Poland, in 1916, recalls various aspects of his youth, including encounters with the Nobel Prize-winning author Isaac Bashevis Singer and Rabbi Aharon Rokeach, the Belzer Rebbe. He also recalls surviving the Spanish flu. (We learned after the interview that he also survived Covid-19.) Efraim Kieslowicz was born and raised in Bilgoray (Polish spelling: Biłgoraj) on July 27, 1916, one of nine siblings. His father was a rabbi and also ran a grain mill and grocery store. He became an electrician in prewar Poland. He spent the war years in various places in the Soviet Union, including Chukotka in the Russian Far East and Samarkand and Tashkent in Uzbekistan. After the war, he spent several years in a DP camp in Ebensee, Austria. He arrived in the USA in 1952, spending several years in New York and elsewhere before arriving in Los Angeles, where he has lived until now. Along the way, he anglicized his name to be Fred Kessler. In 1960, he started his own electrical contracting business, Fred Kessler Electric, later called Robert Kessler Electric when his son took over the business. He was for decades a member of the shtibl known as "Rabbi Moskovitz's shul" on Fairfax St. in Los Angeles, and has been a member of Young Israel of Los Angeles for over 40 years. He now resides with his son Michael in Los Angeles. The interview took place in September 2021. Also on tonight's show, Kolya Borodulin, director of Yiddish Programming at Workers Circle in New York, talks about the upcoming virtual program, Vinter in Yidishland. We'll also hear the Yiddish Voice debut of a new Yiddish version of the Dolly Parton song Jolene, performed by the Israeli singer and actress Ronit Asheri. Finally, to observe Tu Bishvat, which fell two days ago, from our archives: Miriam Libenson Z"L: a talk in honor of the holiday Tu Bishvat, the holiday of the trees, originally broadcast in 1994, followed by music related to Tu Bishvat and/or to trees, generally. Music: Ronit Asheri: Jolene (Music and original English lyrics by Dolly Parton, Yiddish lyrics by Leyzer Burko) Victor Berezinsky: Tu Bishvat Ruth Levin: A Hoykher Boym (Lyrics Shike Driz, Music by Leibu Levin) Hilda Bronstein: Afn Veg Shteyt A Boym (Lyrics by Itzik Manger) Dudu Fisher: Unter Beymer (Lyrics by Alexander Olshanetsky, Music by Moishe Oysher) Intro instrumental music: DEM HELFANDS TANTS, an instrumental track from the CD Jeff Warschauer: The Singing Waltz Air date: January 19, 2022
Eran tantas ballenas que podrían haberse contado por miles. Y todas habían quedado atrapadas por el hielo en una zona de la península de Chukotka, en Rusia. Javier Cancho cuenta en 'Por fin no es lunes' su rescate
Objetivo: La Luna Reseña Programa 558 Exposición: “La flota de Nueva España y la búsqueda del galeón Nuestra Señora del Juncal”; fotografía submarina; la hibernación en el mundo animal; basura espacial, base nuclear en la Luna y el Ingenuity; operación de rescate en el Mar de Siberia Oriental; zoos humanos; y Extremadura en globo. Participan: Carlos León, Carlos Minguell, Fernando González Sitges, Óscar Soriano, Javier Grégori, Luis Pérez Gil, Maricarmen Valadés, José Miguel Álvarez, Celestino Francos y Miguel González. Dirige y presenta: Ángel Alonso Editorial: La barra de hielo https://www.elmapadeoro.com/2021/12/la-barra-de-hielo.html Efemérides, con Celestino Francos: Año 1915, Albert Einstein publica su Teoría de la Relatividad. Año 1942, Se consigue hacer funcionar la primera pila atómica. Año 1971, La sonda Mars 3 se convierte en el primer vehículo humano en posarse sobre la superficie de Marte. En la Entrevista Principal el arqueólogo marino Carlos León habla de la exposición “La flota de Nueva España y la búsqueda del galeón Nuestra Señora del Juncal”, recientemente inaugurada en el Archivo General de Indias, en Sevilla, y de la que es uno de los tres comisarios. También anuncia la producción de una edición especial de Objetivo: La Luna, solo para internet y a la que se tendrá acceso a través de las redes sociales del programa. El programa será un monográfico sobre la temática de la exposición y en él está previsto que participen sus tres comisarios. https://www.facebook.com/cleonamores https://arsmagazine.com/nuestra-senora-del-juncal-una-exposicion-para-salvaguardarlo-del-expolio/?fbclid=IwAR2bGeuk4mAFVMq-voln0Pau34iV2GsKslrJSeX1jG59CJx2vFXSn-RgB_g https://www.abc.es/cultura/abci-carga-invisible-juncal-naufragos-cautivos-familias-arruinadas-joyas-perdidas-sueldos-olvidados-202111300035_noticia.html?fbclid=IwAR3suXaIM9AURYMfulYvLywFMZUXosTB2rS3pOp2YQZ9IH03LC3Ld5qIcq0#vca=rrss-inducido&vmc=abc-es&vso=fb&vli=noticia.foto El Invitado al programa de hoy, el reputado fotógrafo Carlos Minguell, habla sobre Fotografía Submarina y sobre su actual faceta más centrada en la enseñanza y en la organización de eventos relacionados con la fotosub. https://www.facebook.com/carlos.minguell https://www.facebook.com/Ocean-Photos-Fotograf%C3%ADa-Submarina-124658060892486/ https://ocean-photos.es/es/ https://carlosminguell.es/ La Tertulia del Mapa de Oro, con el biólogo científico del CSIC Óscar Soriano y el zoólogo, director de documentales y director ejecutivo de la Fundación Bioparc, Fernando González Sitges, hablan sobre la hibernación en el mundo animal. https://www.facebook.com/oscar.soriano1 https://www.facebook.com/fernando.gonzalezsitges En el tiempo dedicado a la Exploración Espacial, el periodista científico y presidente del Club del Espacio Javier Grégori, habla sobre el riesgo ocasionado por la basura espacial originada por el incidente provocado por Rusia con la destrucción de un satélite artificial, en órbita a la Tierra. También habla sobre instalar una base en la Luna alimentada por una pequeña central nuclear; y dedica los últimos minutos a hablar del Ingenuity, la aeronave que se diseñó para cinco y ya lleva quince vuelos sobre la superficie de Marte. En la sección dedicada a la Geopolítica y las Relaciones Internacionales, el profesor Luis Pérez Gil habla sobre la operación de rescate que ha obligado a los rusos a movilizar tres rompehielos atómicos y varios convencionales, para liberar a más de veinte buques mercantes que se han quedado bloqueados por el hielo en el Mar de Siberia Oriental, en la región de Chukotka, en el Océano Glacial Ártico. https://ullderechointernacional.blogspot.com/ En el espacio dedicado a la Antropología, "los zoos humanos" es el tema elegido para esta semana por la antropóloga María del Carmen Valadés abarcando desde la Prehistoria, a la actualidad, y deteniéndose en las exhibiciones humanas que se realizaron, tanto en Europa, como en Estados Unidos, desde la década de 1870, hasta principios de la década de 1930. https://www.facebook.com/mariadelcarmen.v.sierra En la nueva sección, estrenada hoy, Una Isla al Sur, dedicada al Turismo, la Gastronomía y muchas cosas más, participa José Miguel Álvarez, gerente de la empresa Extremadura en Globo, que habla sobre la experiencia de volar en globo aerostático sobre las ciudades de Badajoz, Mérida y Cáceres. Un interesante y divertido momento radiofónico muy recomendable, que conviene no perderse. Extremadura en Globo - C/ La Concha, 1 3ºC - 06480 Montijo (Badajoz) Teléfono +34 606 975 676 https://www.facebook.com/josemiguel.alvarezrodriguez.9 https://extremaduraenglobo.com/volarenglobo/ https://www.unaislaalsur.com/ https://www.facebook.com/unaislaalsur/ En el Café de Cierre, con Celestino Francos y el director, Ángel Alonso, se une el realizador del programa Miguel González para hablar del aniversario de la proclamación de la Ciudad de San Cristóbal de La Laguna, como Patrimonio Cultural de la Humanidad por la UNESCO en 1999. https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-turismo-la-laguna-audios-mp3_rf_40599204_1.html https://www.aytolalaguna.es/ https://www.ciudadespatrimonio.org/presentaciondelgrupo/index.php El Saludo del programa de hoy es para Pedro y Juanjo, los dos miembros del equipo que, por motivos distintos, no están participando en el programa, para que lo hagan pronto. Con Alicia Rodríguez en la locución, el programa está producido por Paloma Muñoz y realizado por Miguel González. Objetivo: La Luna está dirigido y presentado por el periodista, creador del programa, Ángel Alonso. Más programas, disponibles en: https://www.objetivolaluna.es/p/programas-de-radio.html Síguenos también en: https://www.ladiez.es https://www.objetivolaluna.es https://www.facebook.com/objetivolaluna Si el programa es de tu agrado, por favor, pulsa un "Me Gusta" y compártelo con tus familiares y amigos. Gracias por tu apoyo y colaboración.
This podcast provides some deeper insights into our new publication by Solovyeva et al. (2021) dealing with Arctic Geese in the Eastern Russian Arctic. It provides a showcase for the 'New Digital Arctic' as the myriad changes in the Arctic land-, sea- and coastal-scape are unfolding so fast with devastating outcomes (Krupnik and Crowell 2020). This research shows a more nuanced range and distribution pattern for these two species - Tundra Bean Geese & Greater White-fronted Geese - during moult and brood-rearing than previously known for flyway delineations, nesting and summer range maps etc. This was possible by using Machine Learning and many Open Access GIS data ("Big Data"). Based on the first-time online release of 24 years of field data in very remote areas like rivers of Yakutia, Chaun research station, Chukotka and Northern Kamchatka it presents the best-available public and digital information on the topic, added by GBIF.org data as well as compiled and geo-referenced (Russian) literature data for a good model assessment. This podcast emphasizes the experience and suggestions for data sharing in polar regions and elsehere, as stated by D. Carlson for the International Polar Year (IPY; Carlson 2011) making open access approaches a best-professional practice, if not already mandatory by many funders, e.g.Huettmann et al. (2011), Huettmann and Ickert-Bod (2017) for examples. An application is provided how it can affect better management and protection, e.g. for Climate Change forecast and conservation (Spiridonov et al. 2012). This research raises the question why so many data repositories are either empty, locked behind passwords, or underused, and it shows that Open Access and Open Source in 'The Cloud' can provide a generic progress tfor everybody. Here we provide a workflow and baseline across international researchers to achieve such outcomes with ISO-complian metadata to actually understand the data sets, model inference and outcome. References and background readings Carlson, D. A (2011) Lesson in sharing. Nature 469: 293. https://doi.org/10.1038/469293a Huettmann, F. (ed) (2012) Protection of the Three Poles, Springer Tokyo, Japan, p. 337 Huettmann F, Yu Artukhin, O. Gilg, and G. Humphries (2011) Predictions of 27 Arctic pelagic seabird distributions using public environmental variables, assessed with colony data: a first digital IPY and GBIF open access synthesis platform. Marine Biodiversity 41: 141-179 DOI 10.1007/s12526-011-0083-2 Huettmann F and S. Ickert-Bond (2017). On Open Access, data mining and plant conservation in the Circumpolar North with an online data example of the Herbarium, University of Alaska Museum of the North Arctic Science. http://www. nrcresearchpress.com/toc/as/0/ja Krupnik I. and A. L. Crowell (2020) Arctic Crashes: People and Animals in the Changing North. Smithsonian Institutional Press. Washington D.C. Solovyeva D. I. Bysykatova-Harmey. S L. Vartanyan, A. Kondratyev F. Huettmann (2021) Modeling Eastern Russian High Arctic Geese (Anser fabalis, A. albifrons) during moult and brood rearing in the ‘New Digital Arctic. Scientific Reports.https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-01595-7 Spiridonov V., M. Gavrilo, Y. Krasnov, A. Makarov, N. Nikolaeva, L. Sergienko, A. Popov and E. Krasnova (2012). Chapter 8 Toward the New Role of Marine and Coastal Protected Areas in the Arctic: The Russian Case. in F. Huettrmann (ed) Protection of the Three Poles. Springer New York. pp. 171 – 201. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/falk-huettmann/support
Punto Podcasts, bundan böyle dönem dönem mini serilerle karşınızda olacak! Bu serilerin ilkinde, konumuz Roman Abramovich ve Rus milyarderin kurduğu Chelsea imparatorluğuydu. Güner Çalış ve Mustafa Taha, bir hafta içinde yayınlanacak üç bölümle Abramovich'in futbol dünyasında yarattığı dev etkiyi, onun kendine has çalışma biçimini ve bu süreçte üçüncü kez kabuk değiştiren Chelsea'yi ele alıyorlar. Adaya Ayak Basış isimli bu bölümümüzde bahsi geçen yazılara aşağıdaki linkler aracılığıyla ulaşabilirsiniz. Paul Tomkins'in 2003 yazı harcamalarına dair analizi BBC'den Jeff Randall'ın 2003 yılından gözlemleri Steve Rosenberg'in Chukotka'ya gidişi Abramovich'in üç yıl sonra ilk kez röportaj vermesi Eriksson'un Chelsea'yi satın almasına yönelik telkini Tottenham ve Arsenal'dan vazgeçme nedenleri Punto'nun haftalık bültenlerine ücretsiz abone olmak için: https://apos.to/n/punto Punto'nun twitter adresi ise https://twitter.com/thepuntomag Kapak Görseli: Batuhan Çetin
unikkaat / unipkaat ungipaghat / nallunairutet Circumpolar Waves
In this final podcast episode for 2020 we bring you messages from all ICC offices in Alaska, Greenland, Chukotka, and Canada. Hosted by ICC Chair Dalee Sambo Dorough we include some overview of the activities we were involved in during the past 12 months, of course marked by the global coronavirus pandemic. You will hear from Vera Metcalfe in Alaska, Hjalmar Dahl in Greenland, Liubov Tayan in Chukotka, Monica Ell-Kanayuk and Lisa Koperqualuk from ICC Canada as well as seasonal greetings from the staff. You'll hear Inuktitut spoken from Alaska, Canada, and Greenland, and Russian from Chukotka. We have included an English translation of the report from Chukotka by Irina Appa, who has worked with ICC for many years. You'll find it in the transcript section. Thank you Irina.Music is by Lisa Koperqualuk and throat singing partner Caroline Novalinga from Puvirnituq, Quebec. At the close of the podcast you can also hear Nelson Tagoona, Inuit throat boxing artist from Baker Lake, Nunavut. Additional narration is by Hazel Ootoowak, Project and Office Coordinator at ICC Canada.For more information about ICC, check out our website at inuitcircumpolar.com or find us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
unikkaat / unipkaat ungipaghat / nallunairutet Circumpolar Waves
To celebrate International Inuit Day 2020 ICC Chair Dalee Sambo Dorough holds a roundtable discussion with four Inuit youth leaders from across Inuit Nunaat. Elizabeth Ferguson is the ICC Alaska youth representative. Seqininnguaq L. Poulsen is an Inuit activist and artist in Greenland. Chrystal Martin-Lapenski is the President of the National Inuit Youth Council in Canada, and Gulnara Rodionova is a youth representative in Chukotka.The discussion covers what our youth leaders are planning to mark International Inuit Day, what it's like to be an Inuk in 2020, Music is by Nelson Tagoona, Inuit throat boxing artist from Baker Lake, Nunavut. Additional narration is by Hazel Ootoowak, Project and Office Coordinator at ICC Canada.
In this penultimate chapter, Evgenia unpacks the significance and spirit of community, closeness and connection to the people and life that she photographs in the Arctic. Hear the story behind the photograph from her Chukotka series. Evgenia Arbugaeva: Hyperborea - Stories from the Russian Arctic exhibition is available at The Photographers' Gallery from 9 Oct 2020 – 24 Jan 2021. Visit tpg.org.uk/EvgeniaArbugaeva for more exhibition-related content.
Jonah and Camden talk about dead things and things that eat things. Read about the recent changes to the Clean Water Act (they're not good!):https://www.nbcnews.com/science/environment/trump-rollback-could-leave-waterways-vulnerable-pollution-n1122481 Learn about the Indonesian expedition that discovered 5 new bird species and 5 new subspecies: https://news.mongabay.com/2020/01/one-six-week-expedition-discovered-ten-new-songbird-species-and-subspecies-in-indonesia/ India plans to reintroduced cheetahs:https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/cheetahs-can-be-reintroduced-indian-habitats-supreme-court-rules-180974075/ Roadkill statistics :https://www.hcn.org/issues/291/15268 https://patch.com/us/across-america/deer-collisions-across-u-s-odds-hitting-animals Two studies demonstrating the role of pumas in an ecosystem:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/329325727_Pumas_as_ecosystem_engineers_ungulate_carcasses_support_beetle_assemblages_in_the_Greater_Yellowstone_Ecosystem http://wyominguntrapped.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Vertebrate-diversity-benefiting-from-carrion-provided-by-pumas-and-other-Mark-Elbroch.pdf Why large herbivores matter in ecosystem food webs:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0226946 Scavenger study in the UK:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5513233/pdf/ECE3-6-7015.pdf The human-scavenger relationship throughout history :https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/64/5/394/2754213 Worldwide vulture declines:https://www.birdlife.org/worldwide/vulture-crisis http://www.globalraptors.org/grin/researchers/uploads/580/2011_dropping_dead.pdf How humans benefit from vultures:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/23644288_Counting_the_costs_of_Vulture_decline_-_an_appraisal_of_human_health_and_other_benefits_of_Vultures_in_India Rewilding Europe’s Circle of Life:https://www.rewildingeurope.com/wp-content/uploads/publications/circle-of-life/index.html Polar bears in Chukotka:https://siberiantimes.com/ecology/others/news/56-hungry-polar-bear-besiege-village-in-chukotka/ Ethiopia's urban hyenas:https://www.jstor.org/stable/41682522?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents Listener Patrick's blog about restoring prairie Iowa:https://www.bleedingheartland.com/2019/01/09/one-man-and-a-chainsaw-a-journey-in-faith-and-prairie-restoration/ We’d love to hear from you! Send any questions or comments to conservationchronicles@gmail.com, and find us on Facebook & Instagram @ Conservation Chronicles. Lastly, our show’s webpage can be found at conservationchronicles.podbean.com. Theme Song: Epic Cinematic by Scott Holmes / https://scottholmesmusic.com
Jacqui is the middle sister of 10 and an Auntie to over 20 nieces and nephews. She is a writer, graphic designer, and traditional dancer from Kotzebue. She has traveled across the world, but her favorite places are the Inuit communities in Chukotka, Canada, and Greenland. Jacqui is passionate about astrology, poetry, mental health, and old Native legends. You can find more of her work at jacquiiwithacue.com or on Instagram and Twitter.
John Martin III sailed across the frigid Bering Sea in a 8-foot Walker Bay sailing dinghy. He landed in Siberia after 14 days at sea when wild currents pushed him wildly off course. He planned to sneak into China after sailing down the Yukon River. First he sailed the Tanana River. He departed his native Anchorage, Alaska in the tiny rowing sailboat. He worked his way up the rivers to the Yukon before departing for his wife and son in China. Martin lacked a passport because of his past brushes with the law. He was forced to land in Siberia to avoid being sucked into the Arctic Ocean. After a dangerous beach landing in Lavrentiya in the remote Chukotka region of Russia on August 1, 2018, after 14 days he was detained by Russian authorities for several months before being deported back to his native Alaska. That is where he gave this exclusive interview to Slow Boat Sailing. Photos of his trip were reproduced with John Martin's webpage www.nooceantoowide.com. He plans to write a book of his story. Did low oil pressure cause the Viking Sky to nearly sink? The Norwegian Maratime Authority (NWA) has issued their findings on why the 2-year old, 749-foot Viking Sky cruise ship lost all diesel engine power on Saturday, March 23, 2019. The engine oil pressure got too low due to up to 26-foot seas on the rocky southern Norway coast. Only anchors hastily deployed saved the 1,379 people onboard from abandoning a sinking ship hundreds of meters from the rocks. 479 people were airlifted off the boat. 1,373 lives were in the balance on the 749-foot cruise ship Viking Sky. After losing all its engines on March 23, 2019, signalling a "Mayday" distress call, and anchoring off a lee shore in 6-to-8-meter waves and gale force conditions, several engines were working on March 24, 2019. The Viking Sky launched in 2017. The MV Hagland Captain a 300-foot cargo ship had to be abandoned by all 9 crew due to engine failure. The rescue of the Hagland Captain crew by helicopter delayed the air lift of the guests of the MV Viking Sky. Over half of its 915 passengers were air lifted by CHC Helicopters and the Southern Norway rescue services (Hovedrningssentralen) on March 23 ,to March 24. MV Viking Sky arrived in Molde, Norway at 16:30, on Sunday, March 24, 2019. Istvan Kopar went from last (13th place) to 4th place from day 27 to day 263 of the 2018 Golden Globe Race. The Hungarian-American solo sailor battled broken steering, busted windvanes, lost log lines, broken radios, and peeling fingernails to best 14 other competitors at the start of the the 2018 Golden Globe Race (GGR). The GGR 2018 is a retro race that bans the use of satellite phones and GPS navigation. Kopar got a 24-hour time penalty added to his 263 days at sea because of an unsanctioned stop and sat phone use. All the first four finishers of the sailboat race for full-keel yachts of 32-to-36 feet long have been penalized for breaking the retro rules of the yacht race. 10.25.2017Video by Petty Officer 3rd Class Jonathan R Clay Commander, Amphibious Force 7th Fleet USS Ashland (LSD 48) renders assistance to two distressed American mariners in the Pacific ocean, Oct. 25, whose sailboat had strayed well of its original course. Ashland was operating in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region on routine deployment when the received the message to help.The Slow Boat Sailing t-shirts and mug are at https://teespring.com/slow-boat-sailing https://teespring.com/slow-boat-sailing-mug https://teespring.com/women-s-tee-slow-boat-sailing Support the videos atwww.Patreon.com/slowboatsailing On the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast Linus Wilson has interviewed the crew of Sailing SV Delos, WhiteSpotPirates (Untie the Lines), Chase the Story Sailing, Gone with the Wynns, MJ Sailing, Sailing Doodles, SV Prism, Sailing Miss Lone Star, and many others. Get Linus Wilson’s bestselling sailing books:Slow Boat to the Bahamashttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B018OUI1Q2 Slow Boat to Cubahttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B01MFFX9AGhttps://gumroad.com/l/cubabookand How to Sail Around the World-Part Timehttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B01B0OFYNWhttps://gumroad.com/l/sailinghave been #1 sailing ebook bestsellers on Amazon.You can get the full audiobook of Sailing to Treasure Island by Captain John C. Voss. at http://www.Patreon.com/slowboatsailing SAILING TO TREASURE ISLAND: The Cruise of the XORA (Annotated) by Captain J.C. VossThe paperback athttps://www.amazon.com/dp/1790302390orhttp://www.lulu.com/shop/captain-jc-voss/sailing-to-treasure-island-the-cruise-of-the-xora/paperback/product-23887731.html or the eBook athttp://www.lulu.com/shop/captain-jc-voss/sailing-to-treasure-island-the-cruise-of-the-xora/ebook/product-23887490.html or audiobookhttps://www.audible.com/pd/B07LC35H18/?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-136779&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_136779_rh_us Get the paperback or eBookSailing the Ogre: The Log of a Woman Wanderer (Annotated)by Mabel M. Stockathttps://www.amazon.com/dp/B07MB8BF3C/or the audiobook at www.Patreon.com/slowboatsailingor audiblehttps://www.audible.com/pd/B07N7LT2DQ/?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-140980&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_140980_rh_us Associate Producers Larry Wilson, Kevin Yager, and Rick Moore (SSL).Sign up for our free newsletter for access to free books and other promotions at http://www.slowboatsailing.comCopyright Linus Wilson, Oxriver Publishing, Vermilion Advisory Services, LLC, 2019
Your hosts, Carmel, Levon, Marie-Claude, and Marc (Video of show at bottom) ListenEN_Interview_2-20180914-WIE20 Google: from garage to world -wide domination in 20 years 20 years of Google this year. From a garage to giant headquarters buildings around the world Google has become a powerful mega giant. In July this year European Union regulators hit Google with a record 4.34-billion euro (nearly $6.7-billion Cdn) antitrust fine for using its Android mobile operating system to squeeze out rivals. (Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press) From a university thesis, to a multi-billion dollar corporation, "Backrub" and later "Google" is now the absolute dominant search engine on the internet. The firm has also branched out bought out several other high-tech operations in robotics, artificial intelligence and more. Marc spoke with David Gerhard (PhD), a professor of computer science at the University of Regina in Saskatchewan who looks at the growth of Google and the future. Gold! in a nickel mine? Gold: A 95kg stone, containing an estimated 2,440 ounces of gold, beside a 63kg specimen stone containing an estimated 1,620 ounces of gold recovered at RNC Minerals' Beta Hunt Mine in Australia are seen in this undated handout photo. (HO/CP) They were looking for nickel, but found gold. Not just a little but a surprisingly huge amount worth millions of dollars. The Canadian company was operating in Australia. After a dynamite blast to blow up another section of rock, they were astounded to find gold all over the place, "a mother lode". Estimates are the rock that was blasted loose contains $11 million dollars worth of gold. The CEO of Toronto-based mining firm RNC explains. Major Russian military exercise- flexing muscles and sending a message to the west A military vessel is seen during the joint war games Zapad 2013 (West 2013), at the Khmelevka range on Russia's Baltic Sea in the Kaliningrad Region, September 26, 2013. Russia's Northern Fleet exercised a similar amphibious landing assault earlier this week in the remote Chukotka region of northeastern Russia during Vostok 2018 (East 2018) war games. (Alexei Druzhinin/REUTERS/RIA Novosti/Kremlin) It is being classed as the largest Russian military exercise since the fall of the Soviet Union. The huge exercise involving all aspects of Russia's military. An important aspect is the Arctic portion which sends a message to northern countries like Sweden and Finland that any thought of joining NATO would be "unwelcome" by Russian and viewed as a provocation and threat. Another portion of the exercise sends a a message to the Baltic states about Russia's ability to counter any threat from NATO on that front. It also is designed to show their ability to dominate and respond in the increasingly accessible Arctic seas as ice retreats while also increasing icebreaking capability. Levon spoke to two experts on the subject and gives an analysis. Marie- Claude shows a bit of her Scottish musical journey Marie-Claude spent part of the summer on a Scottish music camp. She visited Glasgow, Edinburgh, the Isle of Skye, and the Outer Hebrides, meeting lots of talented, interesting, and colourful folks...and also learning a bit of Scottish cooking! Video of show Images of the week window.jQuery || document.write('
Everything about the Arctic Inuit communities’ way of life depends on ice and snow, so is the failure of the world to act on climate change a gross violation of Inuit human rights? Sheila Watt-Cloutier currently resides in Iqaluit, Nunavut. She was born in Kuujjuaq, Nunavik (northern Quebec), and was raised traditionally in her early years before attending school in southern Canada and in Manitoba. Ms. Watt-Cloutier was an elected political spokesperson for Inuit for over a decade. She is the past Chair of Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC), the organization that represents internationally the 155,000 Inuit of Canada, Greenland, Alaska, and Chukotka in the Far East of the Federation of Russia and was previously the President of ICC Canada. During the past several years, Ms. Watt-Cloutier has worked through the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to defend Inuit human rights against the impacts of climate change. She has received many awards in recognition of her work. In November, 2015 she was one of 4 Laureates to receive “The Right Livelihood Award” considered the Nobel Alternative, awarded in the Parliament of Sweden. Her recently published book The Right To Be Cold has been shortlisted for the B.C. National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction, the Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for political writing and the Cobo emerging writer prize.
Why do Indigenous people kill themselves in such numbers? What do we know about suicide that can help us understand this? Can we overcome the tragedy of young people dying in a suicide epidemic? Jesse Bering is an award-winning science writer. His "Bering in Mind" column at Scientific American was a 2010 Webby Award Honoree. Bering's first book, The Belief Instinct (2011), was included on the American Library Association's Top 25 Books of the Year. This was followed by a collection of essays--the critically acclaimed Why Is the Penis Shaped Like That? (2012), and Perv (2013), a New York Times Editor's Choice. All three books have been translated into many different languages. An expert in psychology and religion, he began his career at the University of Arkansas, as an Assistant Professor of Psychology from 2002-2006. He then served as the Director of the Institute of Cognition and Culture at the Queen's University, Belfast, Northern Ireland, where he was a Reader in the School of History and Anthropology until 2011. Presently, he is Associate Professor of Science Communication at the University of Otago, New Zealand. His next book, on the science of suicidology, will be released in 2017. Vanessa Lee, from the Wik and Meriam Nations, resides on the land of the Gadigal people. She is a social epidemiologist, educator, writer and public health/ health sciences researcher in the Faculty of Health Sciences at the University of Sydney. Her area of expertise is Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health service delivery. Vanessa was the first National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Vice President of the Public Health Association of Australia for a period of four years where she contributed to significant changes in policies for Indigenous people. She is a director on the board for Suicide Prevention Australia. Dr Lee chairs the Public Health Indigenous Leaders in Education Network and is on the executive board of the Australian Health Care Reform Alliance. She holds expert advisory positions with Close the Gap Steering Committee, the International Group of Indigenous Health Measurement and the Sydney Centre of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Statistics. All of the research, engagement and curriculum development that Vanessa is involved in are directed towards the overarching goal of improving the determinants of health, efficacy and linkages of services for better health of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. Sheila Watt-Cloutier currently resides in Iqaluit, Nunavut. She was born in Kuujjuaq, Nunavik (northern Quebec), and was raised traditionally in her early years before attending school in southern Canada and in Manitoba. Ms. Watt-Cloutier was an elected political spokesperson for Inuit for over a decade. She is the past Chair of Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC), the organization that represents internationally the 155,000 Inuit of Canada, Greenland, Alaska, and Chukotka in the Far East of the Federation of Russia and was previously the President of ICC Canada. During the past several years, Ms. Watt-Cloutier has worked through the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to defend Inuit human rights against the impacts of climate change. She has received many awards in recognition of her work. In November, 2015 she was one of 4 Laureates to receive “The Right Livelihood Award” considered the Nobel Alternative, awarded in the Parliament of Sweden. Her recently published book The Right To Be Cold has been shortlisted for the B.C. National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction, the Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for political writing and the Cobo emerging writer prize.
After flying thousands of kilometres from faraway Bangladesh and New Zealand via the Yellow Sea, the shorebirds of the East Asian Flyway complete their northward migration. They touch down in the Arctic Russia and Alaska to breed. In May and June, birds such as the endangered spoon-billed sandpiper and red knot fill the air of the Russian tundras with their mating calls and display flights. But why travel so far to raise the next generation? Presenter Ann Jones also discovers why Russian and British conservationists are taking eggs from the nests of the spoon-billed sandpiper, the most endangered shorebirds in the world, in a last ditch effort to save the species from extinction. Finally, with the mating season finished and a new generation ready to migrate for the first time, we follow the incredible non-stop flight of nine days by the bar-tailed godwit, as it migrates south from Alaska all the way to New Zealand. The record-breaking species is helped by somehow being able to sense the weather patterns across the entire Pacific Ocean. The series is a co-production from the BBC World Service and Australian ABC Radio National. The sound recordings from Russia and Alaska were provided by the Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. (Photo: Spoon-billed sandpiper chick in Chukotka, NE Russia. Credit: Nicky Hiscock)
Hvorfor fødes det dobbelt så mange jenter som gutter på Chukotka? Sannsynligvis er guttefostre mer sårbare enn jenter for miljøgifter i mammas mage. På Chukotka helt øst i Sibir ser vi resultatene. I første klasse er det dobbelt så mange jenter som gutter. Reporter: Vibeke Røiri
To find out more about the Beringia Arctic Games and the challenges and opportunities of developing tourism in Chukotka, Eye on the Arctic's Eilís Quinn reached Irina Ryabukhina in Anadyr, Chukotka.