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Gwich'in hunting project nets Arctic Inspiration Prize

Gwich'in hunting project nets Arctic Inspiration Prize

A Gwich'in youth project to document how the Peel Watershed is changing from climate change and a youth dog sledding club have been awarded $100,000 through the Arctic Inspiration Prize.
Wisdom From the Watershed aims to connect Gwich'in youth to hunters and Elders as they document how wildlife and flora have changed over the past decades.
'It's very emotional,' said Eileen Kay as she accepted the award. 'I'm really happy and excited. Wisdom from the Watershed was created from the growing interest of our youth, a project on our traditional homelands in a place that we, the Tetlit Gwich'in, have existed for generations.
'Our project will provide an opportunity and environment for our younger generation to return to these places and connect with their culture. To learn how to traverse the land and the water, develop the skills necessary for survival and continue to pass on our stories.'
Kay added the effects seen so far include changing landscape and migratory patterns of animals.
A group of 20 hunters will take seven youth from Chief Julius School in Teetl'it Zheh — also known as Fort McPherson — through the watershed as they introduce them to Elders living on the land. The Elders will then tell the delegation of the changes they've seen over their lifetimes.
'It is our hope that those who participate in our ongoing fall camp will gain the knowledge and skills of our people and carry forward these as they become our future leaders,' said Kay, who thanked Margaret Gordon for nominating the project for the prize.
All of this will be filmed and produced into a short documentary at the end. The aim is to ' broaden the discussion about climate change in Canada's North' and the team behind the project consists of Brandon Firth (Team Leader), Aiden Kunnizzi, Edwin Kay, Rylan Firth, Lucas Francis, Darius Keevik, Jordan Stewart, Dakota Koe, Phillip Kay, Alice Vittrekwa, George Vittrekwa, Eileen Kay and Tony Devlin.
Also earning a $100,000 youth prize was the Uniaraqtuq Youth Dog sledding club. The club teaches youth both Gwich'in and Inuvialuit learning while on the land through the traditional way of transport. The funding will go to film a documentary on the club to showcase the rich history of both the Gwich'in and Inuvialuit peoples.
'Our goal is to increase Northern sovereignty,' said Brooke-Lyn Jade . 'We will guide our nation using language, hunting, trapping and dog sledding to build a future where youth can embrace traditions and build a strong relationship to culture.
'We have been taught fragments of our culture through stories and textbooks. However, nothing will compare to the knowledge youth gain from being on the land.'
Over $3.7 million was given out to 12 teams on May 13 during the Arctic Inspiration Prize ceremony in Ottawa. The ceremony featured performances by Kathy Snowball of Nunavik performing L'amour, Deantha Edmunds and emerging Nunavut singer Princess Autut performing an operatic version of Nuliajuk, the Inuit guardian of sea animals and a visual circus and musical performance telling the story of a Dene Hunter witnessing an animal transformation.

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Gwich'in hunting project nets Arctic Inspiration Prize
Gwich'in hunting project nets Arctic Inspiration Prize

Hamilton Spectator

time21-05-2025

  • Hamilton Spectator

Gwich'in hunting project nets Arctic Inspiration Prize

A Gwich'in youth project to document how the Peel Watershed is changing from climate change and a youth dog sledding club have been awarded $100,000 through the Arctic Inspiration Prize. Wisdom From the Watershed aims to connect Gwich'in youth to hunters and Elders as they document how wildlife and flora have changed over the past decades. 'It's very emotional,' said Eileen Kay as she accepted the award. 'I'm really happy and excited. Wisdom from the Watershed was created from the growing interest of our youth, a project on our traditional homelands in a place that we, the Tetlit Gwich'in, have existed for generations. 'Our project will provide an opportunity and environment for our younger generation to return to these places and connect with their culture. To learn how to traverse the land and the water, develop the skills necessary for survival and continue to pass on our stories.' Kay added the effects seen so far include changing landscape and migratory patterns of animals. A group of 20 hunters will take seven youth from Chief Julius School in Teetl'it Zheh — also known as Fort McPherson — through the watershed as they introduce them to Elders living on the land. The Elders will then tell the delegation of the changes they've seen over their lifetimes. 'It is our hope that those who participate in our ongoing fall camp will gain the knowledge and skills of our people and carry forward these as they become our future leaders,' said Kay, who thanked Margaret Gordon for nominating the project for the prize. All of this will be filmed and produced into a short documentary at the end. The aim is to ' broaden the discussion about climate change in Canada's North' and the team behind the project consists of Brandon Firth (Team Leader), Aiden Kunnizzi, Edwin Kay, Rylan Firth, Lucas Francis, Darius Keevik, Jordan Stewart, Dakota Koe, Phillip Kay, Alice Vittrekwa, George Vittrekwa, Eileen Kay and Tony Devlin. Also earning a $100,000 youth prize was the Uniaraqtuq Youth Dog sledding club. The club teaches youth both Gwich'in and Inuvialuit learning while on the land through the traditional way of transport. The funding will go to film a documentary on the club to showcase the rich history of both the Gwich'in and Inuvialuit peoples. 'Our goal is to increase Northern sovereignty,' said Brooke-Lyn Jade . 'We will guide our nation using language, hunting, trapping and dog sledding to build a future where youth can embrace traditions and build a strong relationship to culture. 'We have been taught fragments of our culture through stories and textbooks. However, nothing will compare to the knowledge youth gain from being on the land.' Over $3.7 million was given out to 12 teams on May 13 during the Arctic Inspiration Prize ceremony in Ottawa. The ceremony featured performances by Kathy Snowball of Nunavik performing L'amour, Deantha Edmunds and emerging Nunavut singer Princess Autut performing an operatic version of Nuliajuk, the Inuit guardian of sea animals and a visual circus and musical performance telling the story of a Dene Hunter witnessing an animal transformation.

Archaeologists uncover an ancient Egyptian tomb belonging to a ‘mystery king'
Archaeologists uncover an ancient Egyptian tomb belonging to a ‘mystery king'

CNN

time05-04-2025

  • CNN

Archaeologists uncover an ancient Egyptian tomb belonging to a ‘mystery king'

A newly uncovered ancient Egyptian tomb is shedding light on royalty that once ruled the region over 3,600 years ago. Archaeologists discovered the massive limestone burial chamber, which has multiple rooms and a decorated entryway, in January in Abydos, Egypt. But the lavish tomb's intended occupant remains a mystery. Graverobbers had damaged the hieroglyphic text painted on bricks at the entryway, leaving the name unreadable, according to a news release issued March 27 by the Penn Museum at the University of Pennsylvania. The impressive tomb didn't contain skeletal remains that could help identify its owner. However, the researchers who made the discovery believe it is likely the resting place of a king who ruled upper Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period between 1640 and 1540 BC as part of the Abydos Dynasty, one of the least understood dynasties of ancient Egypt. The mystery king might be one of several who are notoriously missing from the traditional records of monarchs who once ruled the region. 'It's a very sort of mysterious, enigmatic dynasty that seems to have basically been sort of forgotten from the ancient records of Egypt, because it was in this period of political decay and fragmentation,' said Josef Wegner, an Egyptologist and professor of Egyptian archaeology at the University of Pennsylvania, who led the excavation. 'This mystery tomb … opens a new kind of avenue of investigation (into the Abydos Dynasty).' The burial chamber is the largest to be discovered from any known ruler from the same dynasty, illuminating a previously misunderstood period of history that can only be revealed through material remains, experts say. Archaeologists found the tomb nearly 23 feet (about 7 meters) underground at the site of an ancient necropolis, or 'city of the dead.' The necropolis is situated at Abydos' Anubis Mountain, a natural pyramid-shaped formation that was considered sacred by the ancient Egyptians and served to conceal the tombs built beneath it. In historical records, Abydos was referred to as a sacred city that was the final resting place of Osiris — the god of the underworld — and the preferred resting place for the first pharaohs. The necropolis developed over the course of centuries as more dynasties built tombs and buried their kings within the royal cemetery. Over a decade ago, Wegner and his team came across the first tomb within this necropolis that confirmed the existence of the Abydos Dynasty, a ruling lineage that had been first hypothesized about in 1997 by Egyptologist Kim Ryholt. Ryholt believed the smaller dynasty would have ruled the region of Abydos during a time when ancient Egypt was broken into rival kingdoms. That first tomb's owner, King Seneb-Kay, was an entirely unknown pharaoh who was never mentioned in historical records. Of the eight tombs from the dynasty discovered thus far, Seneb-Kay's is the only one found with a name preserved in the burial chamber. The newly found tomb is similar in architecture and decoration but is much larger than Seneb-Kay's — the main compartment of the three-chambered crypt is about 1.9 meters (6.2 feet) wide by 6 meters (19.7 feet) long. Because the tomb was built in a section of the necropolis that the researchers believe was established earlier in time, they think that the wealthy king buried there was likely a predecessor to Seneb-Kay. The scientists suspect that the tomb might have belonged to King Senaiib or King Paentjeni, two monarchs represented in the sparse archaeological record of the dynasty that exists as part of a dedicated monument at Abydos. 'It is equally possible there could be some entirely unknown king,' said Wegner, who is also curator of the Penn Museum's Egyptian section. 'We don't think we have all of (the Abydos kings) names — evidence hasn't survived consistently for them.' While any markings that might help pinpoint the freshly unearthed burial chamber's former occupant didn't survive, the tomb does still have two painted images of the goddesses Isis and Nephthys, who were commonly depicted in funerary rites as if they were mourning the deceased. The researchers plan to investigate about 10,000 square meters (over 100,000 square feet) more of the area's desert terrain in an effort to uncover additional tombs, Wegner said. 'There could easily be 12 or 15 kings that compose this group of kings,' he said. In addition to further excavation, the researchers will scope out the area using ground penetrating radar, technology that uses sound waves to map structures below Earth's surface, as well as magnetometry, which creates maps of structures underground that have magnetic signatures. 'The discovery of another ruler of the Abydos dynasty is very exciting,' said Salima Ikram, a distinguished university professor of Egyptology at the American University in Cairo, in an email. 'It establishes that there was a significant royal … cemetery here of that time, provides us with more details about royal tomb architecture, (and) gives us a clue as to the members of this dynasty and the order in which they ruled.' Ikram was not involved with the burial chamber's discovery but said she is hopeful that future excavations will yield more tombs that will help to 'further our understanding of this once-obscure period of Egyptian history.' Abydos Dynasty kings such as Seneb-Kay are unique because they do not appear on the king lists that were once kept by the ancient Egyptians. 'The Egyptian kings liked to present their history as straightforward and linear and they recorded (king) names in order. These kings aren't on there. So if we look at this sort of strict historical record, we have no place for these kings,' said Laurel Bestock, an Egyptologist and associate professor of archaeology at Brown University in Rhode Island. Bestock was not involved with the new tomb discovery. 'When we find these monuments, it shows us how inadequate that strict, linear historical record is — it was really written, not to be accurate, but to support a particular point of view of later kings who went and reunified Egypt,' Bestock added. 'They wrote of themselves as great victors and as having won ethnic wars, and they just kind of ignored all the little players.' Discoveries such as this latest Abydos tomb are 'incredibly exciting' because they provide context for a richer history, regardless of whether this king's identity is revealed or not, Bestock noted. As of now, the king to whom the burial chamber belonged remains a mystery, but Wegner's goal is to one day identify the ruler to help anchor him within the historical timeline. 'With archaeology you hope for evidence,' Wegner said. 'The archaeological record, you know, it gives you surprises and twists and turns along the way, so you never know what you can find.'

Archaeologists uncover an ancient Egyptian tomb belonging to a ‘mystery king'
Archaeologists uncover an ancient Egyptian tomb belonging to a ‘mystery king'

CNN

time05-04-2025

  • CNN

Archaeologists uncover an ancient Egyptian tomb belonging to a ‘mystery king'

A newly uncovered ancient Egyptian tomb is shedding light on royalty that once ruled the region over 3,600 years ago. Archaeologists discovered the massive limestone burial chamber, which has multiple rooms and a decorated entryway, in January in Abydos, Egypt. But the lavish tomb's intended occupant remains a mystery. Graverobbers had damaged the hieroglyphic text painted on bricks at the entryway, leaving the name unreadable, according to a news release issued March 27 by the Penn Museum at the University of Pennsylvania. The impressive tomb didn't contain skeletal remains that could help identify its owner. However, the researchers who made the discovery believe it is likely the resting place of a king who ruled upper Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period between 1640 and 1540 BC as part of the Abydos Dynasty, one of the least understood dynasties of ancient Egypt. The mystery king might be one of several who are notoriously missing from the traditional records of monarchs who once ruled the region. 'It's a very sort of mysterious, enigmatic dynasty that seems to have basically been sort of forgotten from the ancient records of Egypt, because it was in this period of political decay and fragmentation,' said Josef Wegner, an Egyptologist and professor of Egyptian archaeology at the University of Pennsylvania, who led the excavation. 'This mystery tomb … opens a new kind of avenue of investigation (into the Abydos Dynasty).' The burial chamber is the largest to be discovered from any known ruler from the same dynasty, illuminating a previously misunderstood period of history that can only be revealed through material remains, experts say. Archaeologists found the tomb nearly 23 feet (about 7 meters) underground at the site of an ancient necropolis, or 'city of the dead.' The necropolis is situated at Abydos' Anubis Mountain, a natural pyramid-shaped formation that was considered sacred by the ancient Egyptians and served to conceal the tombs built beneath it. In historical records, Abydos was referred to as a sacred city that was the final resting place of Osiris — the god of the underworld — and the preferred resting place for the first pharaohs. The necropolis developed over the course of centuries as more dynasties built tombs and buried their kings within the royal cemetery. Over a decade ago, Wegner and his team came across the first tomb within this necropolis that confirmed the existence of the Abydos Dynasty, a ruling lineage that had been first hypothesized about in 1997 by Egyptologist Kim Ryholt. Ryholt believed the smaller dynasty would have ruled the region of Abydos during a time when ancient Egypt was broken into rival kingdoms. That first tomb's owner, King Seneb-Kay, was an entirely unknown pharaoh who was never mentioned in historical records. Of the eight tombs from the dynasty discovered thus far, Seneb-Kay's is the only one found with a name preserved in the burial chamber. The newly found tomb is similar in architecture and decoration but is much larger than Seneb-Kay's — the main compartment of the three-chambered crypt is about 1.9 meters (6.2 feet) wide by 6 meters (19.7 feet) long. Because the tomb was built in a section of the necropolis that the researchers believe was established earlier in time, they think that the wealthy king buried there was likely a predecessor to Seneb-Kay. The scientists suspect that the tomb might have belonged to King Senaiib or King Paentjeni, two monarchs represented in the sparse archaeological record of the dynasty that exists as part of a dedicated monument at Abydos. 'It is equally possible there could be some entirely unknown king,' said Wegner, who is also curator of the Penn Museum's Egyptian section. 'We don't think we have all of (the Abydos kings) names — evidence hasn't survived consistently for them.' While any markings that might help pinpoint the freshly unearthed burial chamber's former occupant didn't survive, the tomb does still have two painted images of the goddesses Isis and Nephthys, who were commonly depicted in funerary rites as if they were mourning the deceased. The researchers plan to investigate about 10,000 square meters (over 100,000 square feet) more of the area's desert terrain in an effort to uncover additional tombs, Wegner said. 'There could easily be 12 or 15 kings that compose this group of kings,' he said. In addition to further excavation, the researchers will scope out the area using ground penetrating radar, technology that uses sound waves to map structures below Earth's surface, as well as magnetometry, which creates maps of structures underground that have magnetic signatures. 'The discovery of another ruler of the Abydos dynasty is very exciting,' said Salima Ikram, a distinguished university professor of Egyptology at the American University in Cairo, in an email. 'It establishes that there was a significant royal … cemetery here of that time, provides us with more details about royal tomb architecture, (and) gives us a clue as to the members of this dynasty and the order in which they ruled.' Ikram was not involved with the burial chamber's discovery but said she is hopeful that future excavations will yield more tombs that will help to 'further our understanding of this once-obscure period of Egyptian history.' Abydos Dynasty kings such as Seneb-Kay are unique because they do not appear on the king lists that were once kept by the ancient Egyptians. 'The Egyptian kings liked to present their history as straightforward and linear and they recorded (king) names in order. These kings aren't on there. So if we look at this sort of strict historical record, we have no place for these kings,' said Laurel Bestock, an Egyptologist and associate professor of archaeology at Brown University in Rhode Island. Bestock was not involved with the new tomb discovery. 'When we find these monuments, it shows us how inadequate that strict, linear historical record is — it was really written, not to be accurate, but to support a particular point of view of later kings who went and reunified Egypt,' Bestock added. 'They wrote of themselves as great victors and as having won ethnic wars, and they just kind of ignored all the little players.' Discoveries such as this latest Abydos tomb are 'incredibly exciting' because they provide context for a richer history, regardless of whether this king's identity is revealed or not, Bestock noted. As of now, the king to whom the burial chamber belonged remains a mystery, but Wegner's goal is to one day identify the ruler to help anchor him within the historical timeline. 'With archaeology you hope for evidence,' Wegner said. 'The archaeological record, you know, it gives you surprises and twists and turns along the way, so you never know what you can find.'

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