Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 18 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Vicky Palvialok is the top cadet  in the Army Cadet Corps in Canada and has become a top student overcoming a difficult background. Sandy Buchanan, Renewable Resource Officer in Coppermine called the Corps "one of the bright spots for teens in Cambridge Bay." The kids have little to do and the Corps gives them self esteem, discipline, and direction. Aurora image #1891407601
    0015__FirstNations.jpg
  • Damarise Aqqiarug dresses her two-year-old son Lester in an outpost camp near Igloolik. In an effort to reconnect with the land, some Inuit families have chosen to move out of town to live in outpost camps. Until Europeans came north,  the Inuit had lived on the land as nomadic hunters for about 4,500 years. Living in an outpost camp  is a remnant of this nomadic Inuit lifestyle. The government provides a small subsidy to help families set up. The Aqqiarugs built a small shelter and hunt and fish for a living. Aurora image #1891410004
    0012__FirstNations.jpg
  • Damarise Aqqiarug dresses her two-year-old son Lester in an outpost camp near Igloolik. In an effort to reconnect with the land, some Inuit families have chosen to move out of town to live in outpost camps. Until Europeans came north,  the Inuit had lived on the land as nomadic hunters for about 4,500 years. Living in an outpost camp  is a remnant of this nomadic Inuit lifestyle. The government provides a small subsidy to help families set up. The Aqqiarugs built a small shelter and hunt and fish for a living.
    09WORLD.jpg
  • A baby seal sits on the ice of Arctic Bay.  It has strayed away from its ice hole. Aurora image #1891405501
    21WORLD.jpg
  • Salmon fishing, Campbell River, Johnstone Straits. - As the waters of the Pacific grow warmer, salmon are changing their migration routes in search of colder water.  Warming oceans could threaten Pacific Northwest salmon because the highly temperature-sensitive fish live in ocean areas likely to be affected by global warming.  already they are starting to change their migrating habits. If atmospheric carbon dioxide levels increase at current rates, the North Pacific Ocean could warm two degrees Celsius by 2070, a study by the Pacific Biological Station in British Columbia said.  That shift could reduce the salmon's preferred cold-water habitat areas by 50% in the summer, and possibly make the entire ocean too warm for any salmon species to survive during the winter.  Salmon might have to migrate into the Bering Sea and out of the North Pacific Ocean entirely to find cold enough water during the winter months. Aurora image #1887405603
    1887405603.jpg
  • On a polar bear hunt in Nunavut, Canada. The young hunter sleeps in an Igloo while on the native hunt.
    0018__FirstNations.jpg
  • Ice breaks up near Resolute Bay in northern Canada.
    NGM199709_76-7.jpg
  • Building the igloo for the night on a native Polar bear hunt out from Igloolik.
    0020__Culture-Travel.jpg
  • 0021__FirstNations.jpg
  • 0019__FirstNations.jpg
  • 0017__FirstNations.jpg
  • 0014__FirstNations.jpg
  • Building the igloo for the night on a native Polar bear hunt out from Igloolik.
    NGM199709_86UP.jpg
  • NGM199709_80-1.jpg
  • NGM199709_68-9.jpg
  • 0021__Culture-Travel.jpg
  • 0020__FirstNations.jpg
  • Scanned by: .Retouched by: DT-PK.QC'd by: DT-PK
    0013__FirstNations.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Joanna B Pinneo Photography

  • ABOUT
  • SOCIAL MEDIA
    • INSTAGRAM
    • FACEBOOK
  • PRAISE
  • CONTACT
  • MULTIMEDIA
  • CLIENT LIST