ANR InterArctic

   

 

The InterArctic project focuses on vulnerability, resilience and adaptation of northern societies facing global change.

The rapid current warming of Arctic and Subarctic climates has already produced many changes in the social, economic and cultural behavior of the populations inhabiting these regions and more changes are expected to come. Few of the changes are considered to be positive or not disturbing the fragile balance between human and the environment. 

The study area includes Eastern Canada (Nunavik, Nunavut and Nunatsiavut) and Greenland (South and North). Around 1000 years cal. AD, some of these areas witnessed the meeting between European farmers coming from Scandinavia, and hunters-fishers arriving from Beringia. Today, these two lifestyles are still coexisting, with farming in South Greenland, and hunters/gatherers/fishers in Nunavik, Nunavut, Labrador coast and Greenland. Within these study areas, our aim is to document 1000 years of interactions between Thule/Inuit people, Norse settlers and their environment, through an interdisciplinary approach exploiting different kinds of natural archives. The use of pedo-sedimentary archives (lakes, peat deposits, cryosols, anthrosols) and palaeoenvironmental multiproxy analyses will highlight landscape evolution, climatic and anthropogenic forcings upon ecological processes. Archaeological sites, and more specifically archaeological soils, ecofacts and artefacts, will give precious information about the nature of these interactions. The complementary anthropological/cultural approach will focus on human memory, perception, practices and prospects of environmental and social changes, archaeological heritage and past settlement location choices, of six communities in Greenland and Canada.

The issues will be explored in an interdisciplinary work through open interviews and co-design workshops bringing Inuit elders and youth together with project researchers. Coproduced knowledge (blending traditional and scientific), including Inuit visual documentation of the community changes and the writing of science fiction narratives, as well as cognitive maps (Inuit internal representation), will then be shared through innovative educational projects such as an interactive web platform designed to share project results, involving local partners in Greenland and Canada as well as French secondary schools and universities. 

An international consortium

The consortium involves 28 scientists from 12 French laboratories and 6 foreign laboratories, with complementary skills in ecology, palaeoenvironment, geography, psychology, geology, archeology, bioarchaeology, anthropology, ethno-history and geomatics.

Role of CEARC

Jean-Michel Huctin, Associate Professor of Anthropology at the CEARC research center, is coordinating Work Package 4 on works in anthropology, social psychology and geography on the memory of past changes, the perception of current changes and the anticipation of future changes. This WP4 involves co-construction of this project with Inuit youth and their teachers in several communities in Greenland and Nunavik.

Project coordination

  • Coordinator: Emilie Gauthier, Université de Bourgogne Franche-Comté, Laboratoire Chrono-environnement (UMR 6249 CNRS)
  • Co-coordinators: Dominique Marguerie, paléoécologue, CNRS ECOBIO ; Dominique Todisco, Université de Rouen, IDEES, Département de géographie ; and Jean-Michel Huctin, Centre de recherche Cultures, Environnement, Arctique, Représentations, Climat (CEARC), UVSQ

 

Involved members:

  • Jean-Michel Huctin

 

Website: https://interarctic.cearc.fr

Project page on the ANR site

 

Related news: