barren ground
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

183
(FIVE YEARS 16)

H-INDEX

20
(FIVE YEARS 1)

ARCTIC ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 74 (3) ◽  
pp. 290-305
Author(s):  
Kelsey L. Dokis-Jansen ◽  
Brenda L. Parlee ◽  
Łutsël K’e Dëne First Nation ◽  
David S. Hik ◽  
Benoit Gendreau-Berthiaume ◽  
...  

For thousands of years Ɂedacho Kué (Artillery Lake, Northwest Territories) has been a key water crossing site for barren-ground caribou (Rangifer tarandus groenlandicus). Human disturbance of barren-ground caribou habitat in northern Canada has emerged as an important focus of study in the last decade; particularly in the Bathurst range of the Northwest Territories where caribou populations have declined by more than 95% since the 1980s. Guided by local Indigenous leaders and Elders, a collaborative research project was developed with the Dënesǫ́łıné people of Łutsël K’e Dëne First Nation (2012 – 14). This paper describes linkages between knowledge derived from Dënesǫ́łıné oral history and quantitative dendroecological analysis of trample scars on black spruce (Picea mariana) root samples collected at Ɂedacho Kué to provide a better understanding of caribou use at this location. Findings from oral histories and dendroecology analysis were consistent with one another and with previous dendroecology study in the region, although some discrepancies were detected in data from 1995 – 2006 that require further study to elucidate. Key findings include relatively low caribou use at Ɂedacho Kué during the 1930s and late 1960s, with use increasing into the 1970s and peaking in the late 1980s, as well as Elder and hunter reports of no caribou in some years between 2005 and 2012. This work addresses a gap in scientific data about barren-ground caribou movements at Ɂedacho Kué prior to satellite collar use in 1996 and corroborates previously documented oral histories about the enduring value of Ɂedacho Kué as critical habitat to barren-ground caribou. Given the drastic decline of the Bathurst caribou over the last two decades, more research is needed to understand movements and their relationship to population dynamics. In this context, the research approach described in this paper could be used as an example of how to meaningfully bring together place-based Indigenous knowledge and science in addressing an urgent issue of Arctic sustainability. 


Author(s):  
Autumn D Watkinson ◽  
John Virgl ◽  
Valerie S Miller ◽  
M Anne Naeth ◽  
Jaewoo Kim ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-77
Author(s):  
Shaikh Ali ◽  
Nidhi M J

Humans have manipulated nature in every possible way for the sake of benefits. Their activities have resulted in ozone layer depletion, deforestation, drying of seasonal rivers, lands getting barren, ground water levels going down etc. Besides, the environmental point of view, in the search of earning profits, new threats have emerged for humanity in the form of adulteration in essential commodities like milk, vegetables, fruits, spices, pulses etc. There has been a paradigm shift in the methods of infrastructure creation and operation, because people have understood the importance of shifting towards more eco-friendly ways doing things. The use of fertilizers and pesticides increased the vulnerability of humanity towards threatening diseases. The vegetables and fruits now take less time to grow and the taste is not the same as it used to be earlier. It becomes imperative to go in organic way and create awareness for the same in the rural areas.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
John Boulanger ◽  
Kim G. Poole ◽  
Anne Gunn ◽  
Jan Adamczewski ◽  
Jack Wierzchowski

Author(s):  
Vanesa Lado-Pazos

<p>Na przestrzeni lat Ellen Glasgow uczyniła z życia kobiet temat wielu powieści. Przyjmując perspektywę <em>gender studies</em>, w artykule zaproponowano porównanie różnych modeli kobiecości na przykładzie głównych bohaterek trzech powieści z trzech epok: <em>The Battle-Ground</em> (1902), <em>Virginia</em> (1913) i <em>Barren Ground</em> (1925). Opracowanie przedstawia ewolucję kreacji kobiecych od konserwatywnego modelu kobiety z Południa do postępowego modelu nowej kobiety. Interakcja tych bohaterek z różnymi patriarchalnymi instytucjami, a także jej wynik, potwierdza wyższość modelu nowej kobiety nad modelemkobiety z Południa i przedstawia przejście Glasgow pod względem gatunkowym od powieści sentymentalnej do realistycznej.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carsten Laukamp ◽  
Maarten Haest ◽  
Thomas Cudahy

Abstract. The integration of surface and subsurface geoscience data is critical for efficient and effective mineral exploration and mining. Publicly accessible datasets to evaluate the various geoscience analytical tools and their effectiveness for characterisation of mineral assemblages and lithologies or discrimination of ore from waste are however scarce. The open access Rocklea Dome 3D Mineral Mapping Test Data Set (Laukamp, 2020; https://doi.org/10.25919/5ed83bf55be6a) provides an opportunity for evaluating proximal and remote sensing data, validated and calibrated by independent geochemical and mineralogical analyses, for exploration of channel-iron deposits (CID) through cover. We present hyperspectral airborne, surface and drill core reflectance spectra collected in the visible-near infrared and shortwave infrared wavelength ranges (VNIR-SWIR; 350 to 2500 nm), as well as whole rock geochemistry obtained by means of X-Ray fluorescence analysis and loss on ignition measurements of drill core samples. The integration of surface with subsurface hyperspectral data collected in the frame of previously published Rocklea Dome 3D Mineral Mapping case studies demonstrated that about 30 % of exploration drill holes were sunk into barren ground and could have been of better use, located elsewhere, if airborne hyperspectral imagery had been consulted for drill hole planning. The remote mapping of transported Tertiary detritals (i.e. potential hosts of channel iron ore resources) versus weathered in situ Archaean geology (i.e. barren ground) has significant implications for other areas where cover (i.e. regolith and/or sediments covering bedrock hosting mineral deposits) hinders mineral exploration. Hyperspectral remote sensing represents a cost-effective method for regolith landform mapping required for planning drilling programs. In the Rocklea Dome area, vegetation unmixing methods applied to airborne hyperspectral data, integrated with subsurface data, resulted in seamless mapping of ore zones from the weathered surface to the base of the CID – a concept that can be applied to other mineral exploration and mineral deposit studies. Furthermore, the associated, independent calibration data allowed to quantify iron oxide phases and associated mineralogy from hyperspectral data. Using the Rocklea Dome data set, novel geostatistical clustering methods were applied to the drill core data sets for ore body domaining that introduced scientific rigour to a traditionally subjective procedure, resulting in reproducible objective domains that are critical for the mining process. Beyond the already published case studies, the Rocklea Dome 3D Mineral Mapping Test Data Set has the potential to develop new methods for advanced resource characterisation and develop new applications that aid exploration for mineral deposits through cover. The here newly presented white mica and chlorite abundance maps derived from airborne hyperspectral highlight the additional applications of remote sensing for geological mapping and could help to evaluate newly launched hyper- and multispectral spaceborne systems for geoscience and mineral exploration.


ARCTIC ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
pp. 326-346
Author(s):  
Eric Bongelli ◽  
Martha Dowsley ◽  
Victor M. Velasco-Herrera ◽  
Mitchell Taylor

Unlike all other members of the deer family, subpopulations of barren-ground caribou (Rangifer tarandus groenlandicus) are typically sine-cyclic. We used Bayesian Information Criteria (BIC) to rank competing population dynamics models for 11 North American barren-ground caribou subpopulations. Nine of these subpopulations were best described as sine-cyclic with periods ranging from a minimum of 26 years (Bluenose-East and Porcupine) to a maximum of 55 years (Western Arctic); and amplitudes ranging from a minimum of 8 455 (Cape Bathurst) to a maximum of 327 432 (George River). Time series estimates of subpopulation abundance generated by the sine cycle models showed good correspondence to published subpopulation estimates of abundance for all nine sine-cyclic subpopulations (r = 0.978; p < 0.001). Lack of demographic closure (migration between subpopulations) was evident in both of the subpopulations that were not identified as sine-cyclic. Barren-ground caribou subpopulation amplitudes were mostly determined by subpopulation total range size and summer range productivity (R2 = 0.962; p < 0.001) and subpopulation periods were mostly determined by amplitude, total range productivity, and land surface temperature (R2 = 0.950; p < 0.001). Time series estimates of subpopulation abundance generated from the respective environmental regression models were highly correlated (r = 0.964; p < 0.001) to the published subpopulation estimates of abundance for the set of 9 sine-cyclic subpopulations. Extended (> 3 generations) subpopulation declines are a natural feature of cyclic barren-ground caribou subpopulations. Trends in species abundance based on pooled assemblages of asynchronous cyclic subpopulations should be interpreted with caution.


2020 ◽  
Vol 724 ◽  
pp. 138305
Author(s):  
M. Gamberg ◽  
I. Pratte ◽  
J. Brammer ◽  
C. Cuyler ◽  
B. Elkin ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document