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January 24, 2003
The masked shrew and other
mammals you didnt know about
New book helps students
discover what the land has to offer
MIRIAM
HILL
Students in Nunavut schools
will soon have another resource book to add to their collections.
Terrestrial Mammals
of Nunavut, a soft-cover 200-page colour-illustrated book written in both
English and Inuktitut, is the third in a series of books created in partnership
with the departments of sustainable development, education and the Nunavut Wildlife
Management Board.
Launched at Aqsarniit School
in Iqaluit on Tuesday, the event drew about 65 people, including elders, students
and government staff.
Jim Noble, the executive
director of the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board, stood quietly listening as
an array of people sang the books praises.
"This book is very
much a celebration of partnerships," said Tom Rich, deputy minister of
education. It is a partnership between government departments, between the elders,
youth and the author and a partnership of traditional knowledge and scientific
knowledge.
The first two books, Birds
of Nunavut, published in 1994, and Marine Mammals of Nunavut, published
in 2001, were created in much the same way as this latest project and by mainly
the same group of people, Noble said. They searched for dollars to make the
book and then found an author.
Written by Ingrid Anand-Wheeler
and illustrated by renowned artists Lucy MacDonald and Andrew Qappik, the terrestrial
mammal book also contains photographs taken by National Geographic photographer
Paul Nicklen.
Noble said that when these
top-notch people heard the book was to be used in schools, they cut their usual
rates, allowing the project to go ahead.
"A lot of the information
comes out of the research centre in Igloolik where they have a lot of the traditional
knowledge documented," he said. Additional information came from interviews
with elders and scientists.
There are some topics,
however, for which there is little or no traditional knowledge, Noble said,
using the masked shrew as an example. Where most of the species documented in
the book have a section devoted to "Did You Know" facts, the masked
shrew entry says that the species is still continuing to be recognized.
More resource books are
being planned, including plants of Nunavut, marine fishes of Nunavut and insects
of Nunavut. Noble says traditional knowledge about the marine fishes and insects
may also be scarce.
Terrestrial Mammals
of Nunavut will be made available to all schools in Nunavut, as well as
public libraries and Hunters and Trappers Associations.
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