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January 17, 2003
High Arctic teen takes
a dip in Antarctic waters
Steve Amarualik represents
Nunavut on Students on Ice Antarctic expedition
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About 75
people participating in the 2002 Students on Ice Expedition Antarctica pose
in front of the ship, which brought them from the tip of South America to the
Antarctic Peninsula.
(PHOTOS COURTESY OF GEOFF GREEN)
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MIRIAM
HILL
Although he hails from
Resolute Bay, 17-year-old Steve Amarualik is now part of the Antarctic Swim
Team.
Known in Nunavut for his
award-winning Arctic sports skills rather than his swimming prowess, Amarualik
represented the territory along with about 30 students from seven countries
on the Students on Ice Antarctica 2002 learning expedition last month.
The group, made up of about
75 people including students, chaperones, scientists, film crews and reporters,
set sail on a six-deck icebreaker, the M/V Polar Star, on Dec. 16. They departed
from the tip of South America and spent two weeks exploring the Antarctic Peninsula.
Amarualik said the most
memorable part of the trip was swimming in the Antarctic Ocean.
"That was special.
Im part of the Antarctic swim team now," he said in an interview
from his school in Resolute Bay. "There was a hot spring on one of our
stops and they asked us if we wanted to swim in the ocean and we said, Sure.
It was warmer than here, but it was still probably -2 C."
The students swam for at
least half an hour, he said.
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Steve
Amarualik, of Resolute Bay, speaks on a satellite phone from a glacier in Antarctica
to Canadian environment minister, David Anderson.
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The trip wasnt all
sightseeing and leisure activities, though. After being selected and raising
$10,000 each to participate in the trip (some won the privilege by writing essays
and winning contests), the students were sent pre-expedition materials to familiarize
themselves with the area and the issues they would be studying while on board
the ship.
Geoff Green, the director
of Students on Ice, said the theme of this years expedition was climate
change.
"We had a number of
experts on board who deal with climate change," Green said. They included
Jonathan Shackleton, a descendant of Antarctic explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton.
The students waded into
the political side of climate change on Dec. 23 when they made a telephone call
to federal Environment Minister David Anderson, whose department ratified the
Kyoto Protocol, a plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, on Dec. 16.
"We called him while
we stood on top of a glacier in a bit of a blizzard and he was home in Victoria
for Christmas," Green said.
"We had about a 30-minute
chat with him. It was great. Each of the kids individually spoke to him and
he asked them questions like what they thought of Antarctica and he also related
some of his feelings from his trip to the Antarctic." Anderson visited
the continent about four years ago.
Amarualik was one of the
students chosen to talk to the minister. He had met Anderson when the minister
stopped at Somerset Island, where Amarualik was guiding, during a tour with
European environment ministers.
Amarualik congratulated
Anderson on signing Kyoto and told him how the Antarctic differed from the Arctic.
"It was a satellite
phone so we couldnt talk too long," he said.
"It was the same [as
the Arctic] but everything was 10 times bigger and more peaceful, more animals,"
he said. "The mountains, the glaciers, icebergs, everything. They were
bigger. When we were coming back from our Zodiac rides we could compare the
ship with the mountains and our ship was pretty big, but it looked kind of small
in front of the mountains."
Amarualik also forged a
close friendship with a young man from Brooklyn, New York.
"They made fun of
us," he said, chuckling. "This kid from the high Arctic, this kid
from Brooklyn becoming close friends."
Green said this is the
kind of thing Students on Ice wants to foster, a respect and love for the environment
around the world and an opportunity for youth to experience both it and each
other.
"I came back with
more education of the world. They were mostly talking about Antarctica and thats
what we learned most about climate change," Amarualik said. "But
its also a great way to get your perspective on life."
Founded in 1999, Students
on Ice leads learning expeditions to both the Antarctic and Arctic regions,
corresponding with their respective summers.
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