Saturday, February 13, 2010






An inuksuk (plural inuksuit) [1] (from the Inuktitut: , plural ; alternatively inukshuk in English[2] or inukhuk in Inuinnaqtun[3]) is a stone landmark or cairn built by humans, used by the Inuit, Inupiat, Kalaallit, Yupik, and other peoples of the Arctic region of North America. These structures are found from Alaska to Greenland. This region, above the Arctic Circle, is dominated by the tundra biome, containing areas with few natural landmarks.
The inuksuk may have been used for navigation, as a point of reference, a marker for hunting grounds, or as a food cache.[4] The Inupiat in northern Alaska used inuksuit to assist in the herding of caribou into contained areas for slaughter.[5] Inuksuit vary in shape and size, with deep roots in the Inuit culture.
Historically the most common type of inuksuit is a single stone positioned in an upright manner.[6] An inuksuk is often confused with an inunnguaq, a cairn representing a human figure. There is some debate as to whether the appearance of human or cross shaped cairns developed in the Inuit culture before the arrival of European missionaries and explorers.[6]
At Enukso Point on Baffin Island there are over 100 inuksuit and the area has been designated one of Canada's national historic sites.[7][8]

Name
Inunnguaq on Rankin Inlet in Nunavut
The word inuksuk means "something which acts for or performs the function of a person." The word comes from the morphemes inuk ("person") and -suk ("ersatz" or "substitute"). It is pronounced inutsuk in Nunavik and the southern part of Baffin Island (see Inuit phonology for the linguistic reasons). In many of the central Nunavut dialects, it has the etymologically related name inuksugaq (plural: inuksugait).
Despite the predominant English spelling as inukshuk, both the Government of Nunavut [9] and the Government of Canada through Indian and Northern Affairs Canada [10] are promoting the Inuit preferred spelling inuksuk.
A structure similar to an inuksuk but meant to represent a human figure, called an inunnguaq (ᐃᓄᙳᐊᖅ, "imitation of a person", plural inunnguat), has become widely familiar to non-Inuit. However, it is not the most common type of inuksuk and is distinguished from inuksuit in general.
[edit] Modern usage

An inuksuk on the flag of Nunavut
Inuksuit continue to serve as an Inuit cultural symbol. For example, an inuksuk is shown on the flag and Coat of Arms of the Canadian territory of Nunavut, and the flag of Nunatsiavut. The high school in Iqaluit is named Inuksuk High School after the landmarks.
Inuksuit — particularly, but not exclusively, of the inunnguaq variety — also are increasingly serving as a mainstream Canadian national symbol. In 1999 Inukshuk was the name for the International Arctic Art & Music Project of ARBOS in the Canadian provinces Québec, Ontario, Nunavik, Nunavut and in Greenland, Austria, Denmark and Norway.[11]
On July 13, 2005 Canadian military personnel erected an inuksuk on Hans Island, along with a plaque and a Canadian flag, as part of Canada's longstanding dispute with Denmark over the small Arctic island.[12] The markers have been erected throughout the country, including a nine-metre-high inuksuk that stands in Toronto on the shores of Lake Ontario. Located in Battery Park, it commemorates the World Youth Day 2002 festival that was held in the city in July 2002.
Officials in various wilderness parks throughout Canada routinely are forced to dismantle inuksuit constructed by hikers and campers, for fear that they could misdirect park visitors from the cairns and other markers that mark various hiking trails. The practice of erecting inuksuit in parks has become so widespread that Killarney Provincial Park, on the north shore of Ontario's Georgian Bay, issued a notice in 2007 urging visitors to “stop the invasion” of inuksuit.[13] In some areas, including Northern Ontario, a large number of inuksuit also have been constructed along the Trans-Canada Highway.

"Ilanaaq", the mascot logo of the 2010 Winter Olympics, located on Whistler Mountain
An inunnguaq forms the basis of the logo of the 2010 Winter Olympics designed by Vancouver artist Elena Rivera MacGregor. Its use in this context has been controversial, both among the Inuit and the First Nations of British Columbia. Although the design is under question, it is widely acknowledged that it pays tribute to the inuksuk that stands at Vancouver's English Bay, which was created by artisan Alvin Kanak of Rankin Inlet, Northwest Territories (which is now in the territory of Nunavut that separated from the Northwest Territories in 1999.) It was given as a gift to the city for Expo 86. The land has since been donated to the city and it is now a protected site. Friendship and the welcoming of the world are the meanings of both the English Bay structure and the 2010 Winter Olympics emblem, with Kanak's creation having the additional representation of the strength of his people and the modes of communication and technology before modern Canada.

Inuvialuit artist Bill Nasogaluak with schoolchildren who came to see the unveiling of his Inukshuk in Monterrey
Inuksuit have also begun to be recognized around the world as an iconic Canadian symbol, thanks in large part to the Vancouver 2010 logo, but also to the construction of inuksuit around the world.[citation needed] There are four authentic inuksuit around the world donated - wholly or in part - by the government of Canada: in Monterrey, Mexico; Oslo, Norway; Washington, D.C. and Guatemala City.[14]

The Monterrey Inukshuk is unveiled by Canada's ambassador to Mexico and the governor of Nuevo León
The most recent of these inuksuit was built in Monterrey in October 2007 by the renowned Inuvialuit artist Bill Nasogaluak. The sculpture was presented to the people of the northern state of Nuevo León as a gift from the Monterrey Chapter of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Mexico and the Government of Canada, to mark the Chamber’s 10th anniversary in the city. The sculpture stands over the Santa Lucía Riverwalk. Nasogaluak, of Tuktoyaktuk, NWT, personally chose the rocks for the structure from a local quarry near Monterrey. The Inukshuk also contains two rocks that the artist took to Mexico from Canada, one from the high Arctic and another from his home town of Toronto. Together these two rocks form the Inukshuk’s heart.
The Inukshuk is also used as the symbol of the Summit of the Americas,[15] because of its connotations of friendship and cooperation.
An inunnguaq is shown on the cover of the Rush album Test for Echo.
The largest inukshuk is located in Schomberg, Ontario.[16]
The Hammer of Thor, located on the Ungava Peninsula, Quebec may be an inukshuk.







BBC's Countryfile measured the ancient tree in a recent programme
Cold weather is believed to have caused one of Britain's oldest trees - known as the Great Oak at the Gates of the Dead - to split down the middle.
The 1,200-year-old oak, near Chirk, Wrexham, has a 34ft (10m) circumference trunk and is thought to date back to the reign of King Egbert in 802.
It is near the site of the Battle of Crogen in 1165 when the tree is thought to have been spared by King Henry II.
Local historian Mark Williams said he was "devastated".
Mr Williams and fellow historian Deryn Poppit discovered the damage on Tuesday.
'Great shame'
He added: "It seems to be a victim of the very cold weather.
"The tree is on marshy ground in a basin with a stream running down nearby.
"With the stream overflowing because of melting snow, the water must have settled around the trunk and it looks as if this has caused it to split.
"It's a great shame that this has happened after the tree managed to survive for so long. We're really devastated."
The tree was spared when King Henry II had his men cut down the Ceiriog Woods in 1165 before he met - and was defeated - by Owain Gwynedd in the Battle of Crogen.
A plaque marking the battle was unveiled last year after Mr Williams and Mr Poppit campaigned to have the site officially recognised.
Last month the tree was featured on BBC1's Countryfile .
Mr Williams added: "Although some parts of the tree were rotten, some of it was still as strong as an oak.
"At some stage in its history, it appears to have been struck by lightning."
After hearing about the damage, Mike McKenna, director of the Chirk wood-based panel producer, Kronospan, has offered to try and preserve the oak.
He said he had asked a specialist firm of arboriculturalists to carry out an assessment, adding: "If there's something positive that can be done, we'll do our best to help."