June 18, 2004
Nunavut's flora, in
all its glory
Colourful new guide
describes 87 different types of vegetation
SARA
MINOGUE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The
new guide to Nunavut's plants includes maps, drawings and information on traditional
use. (PHOTO
COURTESY OF CAROLYN MALLORY)
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Plant lovers and tundra
walkers in Nunavut have a new trekking companion: Common Plants of Nunavut,
a guide to 87 different types of grasses, sedges and flowers that grow across
the territory.
Common Plants, published
by the department of education, is written for Grade 7 and Grade 8 students,
says co-author Carolyn Mallory, but is expected to reach a much wider audience.
The last comprehensive
guide to plant life in the Canadian Arctic was Flora of the Canadian Arctic
Archipelago, published in 1957. It was in black and white, and according
to Common Plants co-author Susan Aiken, was "not particularly user friendly,"
even to botanists.
In contrast, Common
Plants is full of bright colour photos and illustrations, in both English
and Inuktitut. Aiken, a botanist and researcher with the Canadian Museum of
Nature, says their main purpose was to make a book that people want to read.
"We tried from our
limited white man's knowledge to make it interesting to people who are close
to the land."
She hopes the book will
encourage people in Nunavut to observe their surroundings with the botanist's
eye for detail.
"I still remember
when I was in school and my math teacher came in and said, 'What sort of four
is on the clock on the post office? Is it a Roman four, is it a Latin four,
what is it?' and nobody knew," Aiken says. "And his point was that
you go past the post office every day. Learn to observe."
The book is part textbook
and part field guide, and comes with a complete glossary and index. For people
who don't know all of their plant names , there is also a "colour index,"
where plants and their page numbers are listed according to the colour of their
flowers.
Impatient users can skip
the colour index, and use another handy navigation tool: colour illustrations
on the top right-hand corner of each page that form a moving plant parade as
you thumb through the pages.
An illustration of each
plant next to a lemming shows how big the plant is in real life. A photo of
the plant and a description of the roots, stems, seeds and flowers, are followed
by a "Did you know..." section, which relates a unique or interesting
fact, such as, "Inuit used crowberry to clean the barrels of guns."
Or for English-speaking
readers, did you know that the Inuktitut word for cotton grass, puallunnguat,
means "imitation mittens?"
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Purple
saxifrage, now blooming in the hills around Iqaluit, is just one of the flowers
in Common Plants.
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Almost every entry also
has a "Traditional Use" section, which describes how the plant was
used in Inuit culture, some through direct quotes from interviews with elders.
Finding words and descriptions
that would make sense to people in Nunavut, and could be translated into Inuktitut,
was a challenge that Aiken overcame by using images that are familiar in the
north, such as "satellite dish-shaped," which is used to describe
arctic poppies.
"We described one
of the shapes as ulu-shaped," Aiken says. "Down south, no one would
know what an ulu shape was. Up north, we assume everybody would. Instead of
cuneate, which is the technical term."
Each entry also comes with
a map, showing where in the territory the plant has been found. To make the
book most useful to Nunavummiut, the book's authors included only the most common
plants that could be found near settlements in most parts of the territory.
The Department of Education
printed 3,000 copies to distribute to Nunavut's schools and libraries. The remaining
copies will be put up for sale, as soon as the department can figure out a way
to retain the proceeds in a fund that will go towards future books.
The book is the fourth
in a series published by the department of education, in collaboration with
the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board and the Canadian Museum of Nature.
The first three books looked
at birds, marine mammals and terrestrial mammals in the territory. A French
and Inuinnaqtun version of this book is planned.
Nunavut Tunngavik Inc.,
Sustainable Development and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans contributed
funding.
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