I see on my map that Arctic Bay is in the Arctic Circle. That means that you experience a period of some days when the sun does not rise. When does the sun "set"?
The sun right now is setting around 6:30 pm (so right now) and sunrise is happening around 8:20 am. We are losing about 15 minutes of daylight per day. By the end of October, we should be into our dark season.
The darkest day will happen on Dec. 21 (no light what no ever) and then we will start to gain roughly 15 minutes of light per day with the sun finally rising above the horizon around Feb. 6.
Wow! That must be a very dramatic experience. So what about orientation? Is that not disorienting or do things just chug along according to the clock? What about the natives who had no clocks until the past century? What traditions are reflected in such a time warp? How did they function with those kinds of conditions?
After spending six years living and teaching in the Canadian Arctic (Nunavut and Yukon), I returned to the Maritimes to work at my Alma Mater, The University of New Brunswick, as the Media Lab Supervisor with the Centre for Enhanced Teaching and Learning. At the Media Lab I help faculty and students learn how to use instructional and media technology in their classes and projects.
8 comments:
I'd say "I'm not jealous" but then you could say "you're a big liar", and then I would say "you're right".
It's raining here in Fort Simpson, NT
:-(
Boo - rain! It will soon snow there too :-)
I hope you have a shovel!
Hello Kennie,
I see on my map that Arctic Bay is in the Arctic Circle. That means that you experience a period of some days when the sun does not rise. When does the sun "set"?
:)
artie
Hi Artie
The sun right now is setting around 6:30 pm (so right now) and sunrise is happening around 8:20 am. We are losing about 15 minutes of daylight per day. By the end of October, we should be into our dark season.
The darkest day will happen on Dec. 21 (no light what no ever) and then we will start to gain roughly 15 minutes of light per day with the sun finally rising above the horizon around Feb. 6.
Wow! That must be a very dramatic experience. So what about orientation? Is that not disorienting or do things just chug along according to the clock? What about the natives who had no clocks until the past century? What traditions are reflected in such a time warp? How did they function with those kinds of conditions?
artie
This is an intersting post from November 10, 2007 Sunlight in Arctic Bay
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