N.W.T. researchers studying permafrost, ‘the foundation on which everything is built’
INUVIK, N.W.T. — Off the side of the road not far from the airport in Inuvik, N.W.T., among the shrubs and spruce trees, a series of rusted metal bars are buried deep in the ground.
Installed in 2004, they are helping researchers measure how the ground is changing over time.
Jennifer Humphries, permafrost specialist at the Aurora Research Institute, says it’s the only site in the world south of the treeline looking at the long-term thermal expansion and contraction of the ground connected to annual changes in air temperature. She says the ground there has been expanding two centimetres every year.
“It is a very neat site,” she says.