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The Shelter Characteristics of Traditional-styled Inuit Snow Houses
Author(s) -
G. Peter Kershaw,
Peter Scott,
H. E. Welch
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
arctic
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.503
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1923-1245
pISSN - 0004-0843
DOI - 10.14430/arctic1208
Subject(s) - snow , environmental science , microclimate , volume (thermodynamics) , materials science , composite material , meteorology , ecology , geography , biology , physics , quantum mechanics
The shelter value of snow iglus at Resolute (74˚41'N, 94˚54'W) in the Canadian High Arctic was assessed. After a survey of snow conditions, construction sites were chosen and two iglus were built and furnished in a traditional way. A large iglu (4.1 m diameter) contained 72 blocks averaging 23.6 kg and had a surface area-to-volume ratio of 2.21:1. A smaller iglu (3.05 m in diameter) contained 46 blocks averaging 28.2 kg and had a surface area-to-volume ratio of 1.73:1. The smaller iglu provided 75% of the large iglu's space for 76.5% of its mass. Snow hardness averaged 12 000 g·cm-2, and the mean density of the snow was 397 kg·m-3. The energy required to build and heat each iglu was calculated from the snow characteristics, construction activities, and microclimate parameters measured during occupancy. Heat flux was calculated for human bodies, kudliks (seal oil lamps), and geothermal sources at temperature differentials as high as 45˚C from ambient, for both the unlined large iglu and the small iglu, which was lined with caribou skins on the inside. The smaller iglu was more energy efficient, requiring the fat of one seal every 6.3 days for heating, while the larger iglu required the fat of one seal every 3.7 days. The meat content of each seal would have sustained a family of four for the same time interval, and the resultant body heat would have provided 8% to 14% of the total energy necessary to maintain comfortable temperatures within the iglu.

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