SHORELINE EROSION

an Inuvialuit community located on the shores of the Beaufort Sea, east of the Mackenzie Delta, at 69°27N, 133°05W, and it is the most northern com-munity on mainland Canada. The population was esti-mated at 979 in 2000, with approximately 88 % of the population being Inuvialuit. The community has t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: K. Johnson, S. Solomon, D. Berry
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.468.8730
http://research.iarc.uaf.edu/NICOP/DVD/ICOP 2003 Permafrost/Pdf/Chapter_087.pdf
Description
Summary:an Inuvialuit community located on the shores of the Beaufort Sea, east of the Mackenzie Delta, at 69°27N, 133°05W, and it is the most northern com-munity on mainland Canada. The population was esti-mated at 979 in 2000, with approximately 88 % of the population being Inuvialuit. The community has tra-ditionally developed along this narrow spit of land reaching out into the Arctic Ocean providing open ocean on one side, and a sheltered harbour on the other side (Fig. 1). The Hamlet of Tuktoyaktuk has a mean annual tem-perature of 10°C, with a mean summer temperature of 4°C, and the mean winter temperature is 29°C. The ocean freezes in late October, and the ice breaks up in late June. The tidal variation in the area ranges from 35 to 60 centimetres on average.