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Newfoundland Icebergs
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Baffin Island Raven
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Wooly Lousewort
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2AM on the Tundra

Photo Credits: Tim Rast
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Dorset Palaeoeskimo Shaman's Mask is Sad

Photo Credits: Tim Rast
Courtesy of the Canadian Museum of History
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Lapland Longspur
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Beautiful plumage |
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Lapland Longspur Calcarius lapponicus |
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This nest was built on the ground under the gnarled branches of an arctic willow. It has six eggs. |
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The female is less flashy than the male, but she's good at giving you the stink eye if you get too close to her eggs. |
Photo Credit: Tim Rast
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Archaeology at Stock Cove
Coming up next Wednesday evening, July 9th, Don Holly and Chris Wolff will be talking about their ongoing research at Stock Cove. The talk takes place in Sunnyside, Newfoundland and Labrador at 7 PM. More details on the NLAS blog.
Photo Credits: NLAS, Chris Wolff, Don Holly
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Dorset Palaeoeskimo Shaman's Mask is Angry
This is the second of two complete wooden masks found at the Button Point site on Bylot Island, Nunavut. This one looks much more angry or aggressive than the other. You can see pegs on the upper lip and over the eyes where fur eyebrows and mustache would have been attached to the mask. The video below begins by zooming out of one of the suspension holes on either side of the mask where some sort of cord or rope would have been secured to tie the mask to the wearer's face. Both masks are in the collection of the Canadian Museum of History.
Photo Credits: Tim Rast
Photo Credits: Tim Rast
Courtesy of the Canadian Museum of History
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A section of arrowshaft
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You can see the tapered end on the right. A matching end on the next section of arrow could have been lashed in place with sinew. |
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It's important to stay hydrated
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Newfoundland Icebergs off Cape Spear
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Ground Slate Lance Head
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Snow Geese

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The wings look particularly ragged as the geese molt. |
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The river mud gives some of the adults red heads. At least, I hope its mud. Polar bears, foxes, and ermines often have red snouts, too, but for completely different reasons. |
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Little Cornwallis Island, NWT 1994

Photo Credits: Hugh G.
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Lemming

Photo Credits: Tim Rast
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Lapland Longspur chick
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Arctic Badlands
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Can you spot the arctic hare? |
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This run off channel has slowed to a trickle, but for a few weeks in the spring it'll roar with snow melt. |
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I don't honestly know if calling this a rock is correct, or if its just highly compacted sediments. There doesn't seem to be much holding the sand and gravel together. The features are very fragile. |
Photo Credits: Tim Rast
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Wrapping up another site
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Northern Baffin Island, Nunavut
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Raven and a Hare
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