Iqaluit Explained

Iqaluit
Native Name:Inuktitut: ᐃᖃᓗᐃᑦ (Inuktitut syllabics)
Settlement Type:City
Pushpin Map:Canada Nunavut#Canada
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Iqaluit
Coordinates:63.7494°N -68.5217°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Canada
Subdivision Type1:Territory
Subdivision Type3:Region
Subdivision Type4:Electoral districts
Subdivision Name1:Nunavut
Subdivision Name3:Qikiqtaaluk
Subdivision Name4:Iqaluit-Manirajak
Iqaluit-Niaqunnguu
Iqaluit-Sinaa
Iqaluit-Tasiluk
Established Title:Settled
Established Date:1942
Established Title1:Village status
Established Date1:1974
Established Title2:Town status
Established Date2:1980
Established Title3:City status
Established Date3:19 April 2001
Founder:Nakasuk
Government Footnotes:[1] [2] [3]
Government Type:Iqaluit City Council
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Solomon Awa
Leader Title1:MLAs
Leader Name1:P.J. Akeeagok
Janet Brewster
George Hickes
Adam Lightstone
Leader Title2:MP
Leader Name2:Lori Idlout
Area Footnotes: (2021)
Area Total Km2:51.58
Area Blank1 Title:Population Centre
Area Blank1 Km2:10.48
Elevation Footnotes:[4]
Elevation Ft:110
Population Total:7,429
Population As Of:2021
Population Density Km2:144.0
Population Blank1 Title:Population Centre
Population Blank1:7,082
Population Density Blank1 Km2:667.0
Population Demonym:Iqalummiut
Postal Code Type:Canadian Postal code
Postal Code:X0A 0A1, X0A 0H0, X0A 1H0, X0A 2H0, X0A 3H0
Area Code:867
Timezone:EST
Utc Offset:−05:00
Timezone Dst:EDT
Utc Offset Dst:−04:00
Blank Name:Telephone Exchanges
Blank Info:222 (mobile), 975, 979
Blank1 Name:NTS Map
Blank2 Name:GNBC Code
Blank2 Info:OATRP

Iqaluit (; Inuktitut syllabics: Inuktitut: ᐃᖃᓗᐃᑦ, in Inuktitut pronounced as /iqaluit/, ; pronounced as /fr/) is the capital of the Canadian territory of Nunavut. It is the territory's largest community and its only city. It was known as Frobisher Bay from 1942 to 1987, after the large bay on the coast on which the city is situated. The northernmost city in Canada, its traditional Inuktitut name was restored in 1987.

In 1999, Iqaluit was designated the capital of Nunavut after the division of the Northwest Territories into two separate territories. Before this event, Iqaluit was a small city and not well known outside the Canadian Arctic or Canada, with population and economic growth highly limited. This is due to the city's isolation and heavy dependence on expensive imported supplies, as the city, like the rest of Nunavut, has no road or rail, and only has ship connections for part of the year to the rest of Canada. The city has a polar climate, influenced by the cold deep waters of the Labrador Current just off Baffin Islandthis makes the city of Iqaluit cold, although it is well south of the Arctic Circle.

As of the 2021 Canadian census, the population was 7,429 (population centre: 6,991[5]), a decrease of 4.0 percent from the 2016 census. Iqaluit has the lowest population of any capital city in Canada. Inhabitants of Iqaluit are called Iqalummiut (singular: Iqalummiuq).

History

Iqaluit has been a traditional fishing location used by Inuit and their predecessors, the Paleo-Eskimo (Dorset culture) and Thule, for thousands of years.[6] [7] The name, Iqaluit, comes from Inuktitut Iqaluit (ᐃᖃᓗᐃᑦ), which means place of many fish.[8]

World War II resulted in an influx of non-Inuit to the area in 1942, when the United States built Frobisher Bay Air Base there, on a long-term lease from the Government of Canada, in order to provide a stop-over and refuelling site for the short-range aircraft being ferried to Europe to support the war effort. Iqaluit's first permanent resident was Nakasuk, an Inuk guide who helped United States Army Air Forces planners to choose a site with a large flat area suitable for a landing strip. The wartime airstrip was known as Crystal Two, was part of the Crimson Route and operates today as Iqaluit Airport.

It had long been used as a campsite and fishing spot by the Inuit, who called it Iqaluit – "place of many fish" in Inuktitut. The US and Canadian authorities named it Frobisher Bay, after the name of the body of water it borders.

In 1949, after the war, the Hudson's Bay Company moved its south Baffin operations to the neighbouring valley of Niaqunngut, officially called Apex, in order to use the airfield. In the mid-1950s, the population of Frobisher Bay increased rapidly during the construction of the Distant Early Warning Line (DEW line), a system of defensive radar stations—see North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).

Hundreds of mostly non-Inuit construction workers, military personnel, and administrative staff moved into the community, and several hundred Inuit followed, to take advantage of the access to jobs and medical care provided by the base operations. By 1957, 489 of the town's 1,200 residents were reported to be Inuit. After 1959, the Canadian government established permanent services at Frobisher Bay, including full-time doctors, a school, and social services. The Inuit population grew rapidly in response, as the government encouraged Inuit to settle permanently in communities supported by government services.

Naval Radio Station (NRS) Frobisher Bay (HMCS Frobisher Bay), callsign CFI, was established in July 1954 as a result of the closure of NRS Chimo, Quebec. Station CFI was part of the Supplementary Radio network. Because of its remoteness and size, it was very expensive to operate. Renamed CFS Frobisher Bay in 1966, advancing technology eventually forced the closure of CFI later that year.[9]

The American military left Iqaluit in 1963, as their development of the intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM) diminished the strategic value of the DEW line and Arctic airbases. Canada continued to operate an administrative and logistical centre for much of the eastern Arctic at Frobisher Bay. In 1964, the first local elections were held for a community council, and in 1979 for the first mayor. The founding of the Gordon Robertson Educational Centre, now Inuksuk High School, in the early 1970s at Iqaluit confirmed the government's commitment to the community as an administrative centre. At the time of its founding, this was the sole high school operating in what constituted more than one-seventh of Canadian territory.

On 1 January 1987, the name of the municipality was changed from "Frobisher Bay" to "Iqaluit" – aligning official usage with the name that the Inuit population had always used (Many documents were made that referred to Iqaluit as Frobisher Bay for several years after 1987). In the non-binding 1995 Nunavut capital plebiscite, held 11 December, the residents of what would become the new territory selected Iqaluit (over Rankin Inlet) to serve as the future capital. On 19 April 2001, it was designated a city.

Canada designated Iqaluit as the host city for the 2010 meeting of the Group of Seven finance ministers, held on 5–6 February.[10] The requirements for the international meeting strained the northern communications technology infrastructure and required supplemental investment.[11]

Timeline

Geography

Iqaluit is the northernmost city in Canada, at 63 degrees north of the Equator. Iqaluit is located in the Everett Mountains, which rise from Koojesse Inlet, an inlet of Frobisher Bay, on the southeast part of Baffin Island. It is well to the east of Nunavut's mainland, and northeast of Hudson Bay.

Climate

Iqaluit has a tundra climate (Köppen: ET) typical of the Arctic region, although it is well outside the Arctic Circle. The city features long, cold winters and brief, cool summers. Average monthly temperatures are below freezing for eight months of the year. Iqaluit averages just over of precipitation annually, much wetter than many other localities in the Arctic Archipelago, with the summer being the wettest season. Temperatures of the winter months are comparable to other northern communities further west on the continent such as Yellowknife and to some extent even Fairbanks, Alaska, even though Iqaluit is a few degrees colder than the latter. Summer temperatures are, however, much colder due to its easterly maritime position affected by the waters of the cold Baffin Island Current. This means that the tree line is much further south in the eastern part of Canada, being as southbound, in spite of low elevation, as northern Labrador.[15]

Although it is north of the natural tree line, there are some short, south-facing imported black spruce (Picea mariana) specimens protected by snowdrifts in the winter,[16] in addition to a few shrubs, which are woody plants. These include the Arctic willow (Salix arctica). The Arctic willow may be up to around horizontally, but only tall.

The climate of Iqaluit is also colder than Gulf Stream locations on the same latitude. For example, the Norwegian city of Trondheim has an annual mean temperature that is milder.

The lowest temperature ever recorded was on 10 February 1967. The highest temperature ever recorded in Iqaluit was on 21 July 2008.

Cityscape

Neighbourhoods

Suburbs

Apex (Niaqunngut), officially and functionally part of the City of Iqaluit, is a small community about southeast from Iqaluit's centre and is known in Inuktitut as Niaqunngut. It is located on a small peninsula separating Koojesse Inlet from Tarr Inlet. There is a women's shelter, a church, a primary school (Nanook Elementary School), a design shop and a bed and breakfast in the community. Apex was where most Inuit lived when Iqaluit was a military site and off-limits to anyone not working at the base.

Architecture and attractions

Much of Iqaluit's architecture is functionaldesigned to minimize material costs, while retaining heat and withstanding the climate. Early architecture runs from the 1950s military barracks of the original DEW line installation, through the 1970s white hyper-modernist fibreglass block of the Nakasuk School and Municipal Offices and Arena, to the lines of the steel-reinforced concrete high-rise complex on the hill above it. A number of older Hudson's Bay Company and early 1950s buildings have been retained and restored in Apex (the former nursing station has been revived as the Rannva Bed and Breakfast, the HBC buildings as an art gallery). The newer buildings are more colourful and diverse, and closer to the norms of southern architecture.

The principal exception is the Nunavut Legislative Assembly Building, which is remarkable for its colourful interior, adorned with some of the very best in Inuit art. A new legislative building is in planning to be developed and built outside the city on the Apex Road.Another distinctive building was St. Jude's Anglican Cathedral, see of the Anglican Diocese of The Arctic, which was a white building shaped like an igloo. The altar was built by the parishioners, under the guidance of Markoosie Peter, a traditional master carpenter. It was shaped like a traditional Inuit sled, and the cross composed of two crossed narwhal tusks. An incident of arson severely affected the Cathedral structure and interior on 5 November 2005,[17] and it was demolished on 1 June 2006. The cathedral is slowly being rebuilt (foundation 2008 superstructure 2010) and fund-raising continues locally and internationally. In December 2010, the exterior of a similarly shaped replacement cathedral was completed, and interior work was planned for 2011 with a potential opening for Christmas 2011. The current building, informally referred to as the Igloo Cathedral, was opened on 3 June 2012. The unique building, in the shape of an igloo, has traditionally been a landmark and tourist attraction in Iqaluit, besides its important spiritual role for Iqalummiut (people of Iqaluit).

On a ridge overlooking the city is the distinctive blue and white Inuksuk High School. The school is made up of four square sections joined that give a cloverleaf shape when viewed from the air.

The city is also the location of the Nunatta Sunakkutaangit Museum, which houses a large collection of Inuit and Arctic objects. The museum is housed in a restored and extended Hudson's Bay Company building, clad in the HBC signature red and white, transported to Iqaluit from its original site on the Apex Beach.Just west of Iqaluit is the Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park. This park is dominated by the valley of the Sylvia Grinnell River. A small visitor's centre with viewing platform is located on top of a hill overlooking scenic waterfalls, tidal flats and traditional fishing sites.

Nearby on an island near Peterhead Inlet, is the Qaummaarviit Territorial Park. It is a site with a long Inuit history and numerous artifacts have been recovered, including the remains of 11 semi-buried sod houses.

A little farther, across Frobisher Bay, are the Katannilik Territorial Park Reserve and the Soper River, a Canadian Heritage River, forming a park corridor linking Iqaluit along traditional overland travel routes with Kimmirut (formerly Lake Harbour). Frobisher Bay extends for almost to the east, with moderate hills, glaciers and traditional and summer camp sites, opening into the Davis Strait, which divides Nunavut from Greenland.

Iqaluit, like many Nunavut communities, has a volunteer-run annual spring festival. Called Toonik Tyme it involves a combination of traditional Inuit activities combined with more modern events, while the Alianait Music and Arts Festival is held for a week each 21 June.[18] The festival has attracted Canadian and international artists such as Joshua Haulli,[19] Quantum Tangle,[20] Washboard Hank[21] and Namgar.[22]

Demographics

In the 2021 Canadian census conducted by Statistics Canada, Iqaluit had a population of 7,429 living in 2,708 of its 3,297 total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of 7,740. With a land area of, it had a population density of in 2021.[23]

The median value of these dwellings is $376,639, quite a bit higher than the national median at $280,552. The average household has about 2.8 people living in it, and the average family has 1.4 children living at home with them. The median (after-tax) household income in Iqaluit is quite high, $98,921, almost double the national rate at $54,089. The median income for an individual in the city, is also high, $60,688. 5.9 per cent of people (over 15 years old) are either divorced or separated, which is quite a bit lower than the national rate at 8.6 per cent. Also, 53.3 per cent of the population is either married or living with a common law partner.

Iqaluit has quite a young population, the median age of the population is more than 10 years younger than the national rate, 30.1 years old compared to 40.6 years old.

For those over the age of 25:

The 2021 census reported that immigrants (individuals born outside Canada) comprise 750 persons or 10.3% of the total population of Iqaluit. Of the total immigrant population, the top countries of origin were Philippines (195 persons or 26.0%), Cameroon (50 persons or 6.7%), United Kingdom (40 persons or 5.3%), Nigeria (40 persons or 5.3%), Zimbabwe (40 persons or 5.3%), United States of America (35 persons or 4.7%), India (25 persons or 3.3%), Pakistan (20 persons or 2.7%), China (20 persons or 2.7%), Jamaica (20 persons or 2.7%), and Ethiopia (20 persons or 2.7%).

Ethnicity

As of 2016, Iqaluit has the most Inuit in both numbers (3,900) and per centages (59.1 per cent), of all Canadian cities with populations greater than 5,000.[24] [25]

Panethnic group! colspan="2"
20212016[26] 2011[27] 2006[28] 2001[29]
Indigenous4,0554,5054,0403,6503,065
European2,3502,5002,2652,2352,030
African395225704525
Southeast Asian235165703515
South Asian10065553015
East Asian5560606525
Latin American4025151010
Middle Eastern3530101010
Other401010100
Total responses7,3107,5906,6006,0855,195
Total population7,4297,7406,6996,1845,236

Language

There is no "majority mother tongue" in Iqaluit, as 45.4 percent reported their mother tongue as being English, and 45.4 percent also reported their mother tongue as Inuktitut. English is spoken by 97.2 percent of Iqaluit residents, however, whereas only 53.1 percent can speak Inuktitut. French was the mother tongue of 4.8 percent of the population, which is the same figure of the population who can speak the language. As of 2012, "Pirurvik, Iqaluit's Inuktitut language training centre, has a new goal: to train instructors from Nunavut communities to teach Inuktitut in different ways and in their own dialects when they return home."[30]

Religion

According to the 2021 census, religious groups in Iqaluit included:[31]

Education

The Qikiqtani School Operations based in Pond Inlet operates five schools in the area. Nanook Elementary School, located in Apex, Nakasuk School and Joamie Ilinniarvik School offer kindergarten to grade 5. Aqsarniit Ilinniarvik School offers grades 6 to 8 and Inuksuk High School offers grades 9 to 12.[32]

The Commission scolaire francophone du Nunavut runs École des Trois-Soleils and offers kindergarten to grade 12.[33]

At the post-secondary level there are two, Nunavut Arctic College (Nunatta Campus) and Akitsiraq Law School.

Infrastructure

Emergency services

Emergency services (fire and ambulance) are provided by city from a single station on Niaqunngusiariaq.[34]

The emergency services fleet consists of:

Iqaluit Airport Emergency Services is responsible for fire services at the airport. Following a fire at the airport in 1998, the Government of Nunavut re-opened the fire station at the airport.[35] Their fleet consists of:

Policing in Iqaluit, as with the rest of Nunavut, is contracted to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) V Division[36] and the city is home to the divisional headquarters.[37]

Medical services

Qikiqtani General Hospital is the primary care facility in the city. There is also a Family Practice Clinic providing primary care services by Nurse Practitioners. Two dental clinics exist in the city.

Sports facilities

Iqaluit features two arenas, the Arctic Winter Games Arena and Arnaitok, the Iqaluit Aquaplex, a curling rink, the Timmianut Pikiuqarvik disc golf course, the Frobisher Inn Fitness Centre, in the W.G. Brown Building/Astro Hill Complex,[38] a golf course, outdoor basketball courts, soccer nets, seasonal outdoor ice rinks, a shooting range, a skatepark, and more.[39]

Waste and water treatment

The city's infrastructure is stressed by growth and lack of means to upgrade. Waste from the city is disposed of into an open air dump on Akilliq Drive (West 40) located south of the city.[40]

Although the city has water treatment facilities, raw sewage from the city is often dumped untreated into nearby Frobisher Bay.[40]

As the dump has reached capacity, the city plans to open a second dump north of the city.[41] Iqaluit does not have a recycling program in place; all recyclable materials are sent into the waste stream.

In October 2021, residents of Iqaluit, experienced a water crisis when their tap water was found to be contaminated with fuel. The contamination was traced to a decades-old underground fuel tank that had leaked into the city's water supply.[42] The crisis led to a state of emergency, with residents relying on bottled water and water from nearby rivers for drinking, cooking, and other daily needs.[43] The situation highlighted the challenges of providing safe and reliable water services in remote and Arctic communities.[44]

Transportation

See also: Iqaluit Public Transit, Highways in Nunavut and Crimson Route. Iqaluit is the smallest Canadian capital in terms of population, and the only capital that is not connected to other settlements by a highway. Located on an island remote from the Canadian highway system, Iqaluit is generally only accessible by aircraft and, subject to ice conditions, by boat.Iqaluit Airport is a modern facility with a runway long enough for most modern jet aircraft. A new, larger passenger terminal building north of the old terminal was completed in 2018.

Canadian North serves Iqaluit from Ottawa, Yellowknife, and several communities in Nunavut. Locally based airlines Air Nunavut, Canadian Helicopters, Nunasi Helicopters, and Unaalik Aviation provide air charters, and Air Nunavut and Keewatin Air provide MEDIVAC/air ambulance service. Air Canada Jazz provided daily service to Iqaluit from Ottawa in 2010 and 2011, but cancelled service due to rising fuel costs, which prevented the route from being profitable.[45] [46]

Iqaluit shared its runway with the Royal Canadian Air Force until the Canadian Forces stopped using Iqaluit as a Canadian NORAD Region Forward Operating Location. The barracks and CF-188 hangars are maintained. The airport has been a centre for cold-weather testing of new aircraft, such as the Airbus A380 in February 2006.

A deepsea port opened in Iqaluit in July 2023, after five years of construction.[47] [48] The port features a dredged fixed dock, mooring space, a cargo laydown area, an all-tide barge ramp, and a fuel manifold.[49] Initial plans for the port included facilities for a vehicle ferry connection to Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador, however these plans were dropped due to high cost.[50] Experienced locals also cross the Hudson Strait from the Canadian mainland when it freezes over, either on foot or by dog sled or snowmobile, a distance of over .Iqaluit has a local road system only stretching from the nearby community of Apex to the Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park, west of town. Iqaluit has no public transportation, although there is citywide taxi service. Iqaluit Public Transit used to offer bus service in the city, but the service was cancelled due to low ridership. Motor cars are increasing in number, to the extent of causing occasional traffic jams known locally as "the rush minute". The cost of shipping automobiles and the wear-and-tear of the harsh Arctic climate combined with its notoriously rough roadways mean that snowmobiles remain the preferred form of personal transportation. All-terrain vehicles are also common in most of the Canadian Arctic. Snowmobiles are used to travel within the city and in the surrounding area. In winter, dog sleds are still used, but primarily for recreation. In winter, the nearby Qaummaarviit Territorial Park and the more remote Katannilik Territorial Park Reserve are only accessible by snowmobile, dog sled or foot. In the summer, both are accessible by boat. Most major roads within Iqaluit are paved with asphalt, but local and smaller roads are gravel. Roads do not have traffic signals, but use stop signs to control intersections.

Residents and businesses identify their locations mostly by building number, and occasionally by the name of a prominent structure. Residents know where in the city certain series of building numbers are located; numbers tend to be aggregated in blocks, so someone might say that they live in the 2600s. Around 2003, street names were developed, although there were delays in finalizing them and posting the signs. Street numbers have not been assigned, and building numbers continue to be used. Iqaluit is the only Canadian capital city not to have traffic signals,[51] although some have been installed on a temporary basis.[52]

Communications

Landline services in Iqaluit (established in 1958 by Bell Canada) and throughout northern Canada (established by Northwestel in five western Nunavut communities, and by Bell Canada elsewhere in Nunavut), are provided since 1992 by Northwestel.[53]

Cell service is provided by Ice Wireless,[54] Bell Mobility,[55] and Qiniq.[56]

Internet service is available through Northwestel, Ice Wireless, Qiniq, Xplornet and Meshnet.[57] Meshnet Community WiFi is a free community WiFi and paid service available in most areas of the city. Free services include access to Isuma.tv, and many other resources.

Media

Press

Radio

FrequencyCall signBrandingFormatOwnerNotes
AM 1230 & FM 91.1CFFBCBC Radio OneTalk radio, public radioCanadian Broadcasting CorporationPart of CBC North; broadcasts English and Inuktitut programming
FM 88.3CBM-FM-3CBC MusicAssorted music, public radioCanadian Broadcasting CorporationRebroadcaster of CBM-FM (Montreal)
FM 89.7VF9132Yle Radio SuomiAssorted music, sports, news and phone-in programmingYleisradio Oy
FM 93.3CIQA-FMWeatheradio CanadaWeather radioMeteorological Service of CanadaRebroadcaster of VEV284 (Iqaluit Airport)
FM 99.9CKIQ-FMIce FMClassic rockNorthern Lights Entertainment
FM 103.5CKGC-FMCapital FMOldiesNorthern Lights Entertainment
FM 107.3CFRT-FM107.3 CFRTCommunity radioAssociation des Francophones du NunavutFrench language community radio

Television

OTA channelCall signNetworkNotes
4.1CH8106Yle TV1Timeshift simulcast feed
6.1CH7729Yle TV2Timeshift simulcast feed
8.1CH0283Uvagut TVTerrestrial feed
10.1CH4161Aboriginal Peoples Television NetworkEastern Time Zone feed
12.1CH2260Ici Radio-Canada TéléCommunity owned rebroadcaster of CBFT-DT (Montreal)
17.1CH4584CBC NorthCommunity-owned broadcaster of CFYK-DT (Yellowknife, Northwest Territories)
35.1CH0977Legislative Assembly of Nunavut and the Northwest TerritoriesBranded on-air as “Legislative Television”
47.1CH9112Independent stationBranded on-air as “Isuma Local Media”

Iqaluit was served by CFFB-TV channel 8, a CBC Television/CBC North repeater of CFYK-DT (Yellowknife) until 31 July 2012 when it was closed because of budget cuts at the CBC.[58] [59]

Notable people

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Municipal Election Results 2019–2020 . 29 December 2022 . . 26 December 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221226060215/https://www.elections.nu.ca/sites/default/files/documents/municipal_council_election_results_2019_en.pdf . live .
  2. Web site: 2021 General Election . 29 December 2022 . . 7 January 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230107005847/https://www.elections.nu.ca/sites/default/files/documents/2021%20GE%20Results_0.pdf . live .
  3. Web site: Iqaluit City Council . 29 December 2022 . 29 December 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221229214033/https://www.iqaluit.ca/city-hall/city-council . live .
  4. Elevation at airport.
  5. Web site: Census Profile, 2016 Census Iqaluit [Population centre] ]. . 2021 . 9 May 2022 . 30 November 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221130130523/https://census.gc.ca/census-recensement/2021/dp-pd/prof/details/page.cfm?Lang=E&SearchText=Iqaluit&DGUIDlist=2021S05100306&GENDERlist=1,2,3&STATISTIClist=1&HEADERlist=0 . live .
  6. Web site: Iqaluit, Nunavut – A Guide for Newcomers . 25 December 2021 . 25 December 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211225183011/https://www.myconsultant.ca/EN/Iqaluit-Nunavut--A-Guide-for-Newcomers . live .
  7. https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/iqaluit Iqaluit
  8. Web site: About Iqaluit: History & Milestones – City of Iqaluit . www.city.iqaluit.nu.ca . 2 May 2018 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20200623013451/https://www.iqaluit.ca/visitors/explore-iqaluit/history . 23 June 2020.
  9. Web site: HMCS Frobisher Bay . 6 October 2017 . 19 July 2020 . 19 July 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200719195841/https://www.canada.ca/en/navy/services/history/ships-histories/frobisher-bay.html . live .
  10. News: Iqaluit G7 talks serious business: Aglukkaq . Cbc.ca . 2 February 2010 . 12 December 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120922173405/http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/story/2010/02/02/iqa-g7-talks.html . 22 September 2012 . live.
  11. News: G7 tests Nunavut data networks . Cbc.ca . 4 February 2010 . 12 December 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120104203326/http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/story/2010/02/04/iqaluit-g7-communications.html . 4 January 2012 . live.
  12. Web site: Iqaluit Wins the Capital Plebiscite . https://archive.today/20070311101305/http://www.nunanet.com/~nunat/week/51215.html%232 . 11 March 2007 . dead . 15 December 1995 . Nunatisaq News . 30 July 2006.
  13. News: Iqaluit to host G7 finance meeting . CBC News . 18 November 2009 . 25 August 2012 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20121114180504/http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/story/2009/11/18/nunavut-g7-meet.html . 14 November 2012.
  14. Web site: Pope Francis, in Iqaluit visit, asks forgiveness for residential schools . 29 July 2022 . 29 August 2022 . 3 August 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220803135959/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/pope-francis-iqaluit-nunavut-visit-1.6535224 . live .
  15. Web site: The Treeline in Canada . NWT Department of Education, Culture and Employment . 10 February 2015 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20150210030744/http://www.ece.gov.nt.ca/files/K-12/Curriculum/social-studies/circumpolar-world/maps/C2-Map-Page-17-The-Treeline-in-Canada.pdf . 10 February 2015.
  16. News: Edgar . Courtney . 11 December 2018 . Christmas trees can grow in Iqaluit . Nunatsiaq News . Nortext Publishing Corporation . 26 April 2020 . 16 January 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200116031905/https://nunatsiaq.com/stories/article/christmas-trees-can-grow-in-iqaluit/ . live .
  17. News: Iqaluit officials confirm cathedral fire was deliberately set . CBC News . 10 November 2005.
  18. Web site: Alianait . 19 July 2020 . 21 July 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200721195642/https://alianait.ca/ . live .
  19. Web site: Nunavut teen from Igloolik wins Alianait battle of the bands . 29 June 2015 . 19 July 2020 . 30 August 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200830102454/https://nunatsiaq.com/stories/article/65674nunavut_youth_from_igloolik_win_alianait_battle_of_the_bands/ . live .
  20. Web site: Lovers reunite across borders at Nunavut's Alianait Arts Festival . 19 July 2020 . 23 August 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190823214914/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/lovers-reunite-across-borders-at-alianait-arts-festival-1.3656282 . live .
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