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Arctic Bay is located on the northern shore of Adams Sound, off Admiralty Inlet, on North Baffin Island in the new Territory of Nunavut. High hills surround the community on the three sides with nearly a land- locked bay on the fourth side. This geographical characteristic prompted the Inuktitut name "Ikpiarjuk" meaning the "pocket". The community itself sits on a low gravel beach near the water. Inuit nomads migrating from the west have occupied the Arctic Bay area for nearly 5000 years. In 1872, a European whaling ship, the Arctic, captained by Willie Adams, passed through and gave the area its English name.
In 1910 Captain Joseph Bernier's third expedition wintered in Arctic Bay. Bernier sent out dog sled parties to explore and map much of North Baffin. The Hudson's Bay Company established a post in Arctic Bay in 1926. The post closed a year later but reopened in 1936. Inuit in the area-trapped white fox using stone cairns and gathered around the post when they came to trade the pelts for goods.
The northern part of Baffin Island is classified as a Polar Desert. In other words, the annual snowfall in Arctic Bay is about 72 centimetres and the annual rainfall is about 5 centimetres. Contrary to popular belief, the winters here are not full of blizzards. In January, temperatures range between a low of -34° C and high of about -26° C. In July the temperatures range between a low of 2° C to a high of about 10 C.
The bay starts to freeze in October and begins to thaw around mid-July. The mount of daylight in the winter diminishes to nothing by mid-November and it remains dark for about two and a half months, till the end of January. The amount of the daylight increases to 24 hours a day by the beginning of May and for the next three and a half months until mid-August, daylight is continuous.
The Department of Transportation set up a weather station in 1942 and it remained in Arctic Bay until 1952. A Federal school, Inuujaq School, was built in 1962 encouraging a more permanent settlement. Oil exploration by Pan arctic Oil and the development of the lead-zinc mine at Nanisivik 32 kilometres away, has led to Arctic Bay becoming the community that it is today. Traditional hunting and fishing activities are still a vital part of community life and one outpost camp still operates in the area. 97% of the community's population of 730 is Inuit. Inuujaq School is the educational institute providing an Aboriginal Head Start Program, and Kindergarten up to grade 12. 278 students attend the school. In the village there is a Nunavut Arctic College campus offers Adult Basic Education and special programs. Arctic Bay has two stores, the Northern Store and the Taqqut Coop, where residents can purchase food and clothing. We receive a government supply ship once a year. We have a post office which is located at the Taqqut Co-op Store.
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