Nadav Neuhaus

  • Portfolio
  • Video
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Instagram
Show Navigation
All Galleries
Download

Inuit seal hunting { 30 images } Created 4 Nov 2008

twitterlinkedinfacebook
View: 100 | All

Loading ()...

  • Blood marks of Seals after being skinned by Inuit?s hunters on the ice of Resolute Bay Tuesday June 12 2007..The Inuit?s hunting seals for food, every part of the seals is used or for food or for worm cloth.....
    _MG_1336.JPG
  • Tomi Salovinik, age 19, eats a piece of seal meat from an animal that was killed just few hour before in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. The Inuit hunt seals for food, and the community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see
    _MG_1343.JPG
  • Mark Ammarualik skin and cut a Seal in Resolute Bay Tuesday June 12 2007..Mark is an Inuit hunter that hunt seals for food, every part of the seals is used or for food or for worm cloth...
    _MG_1507.JPG
  • Blood marks and seal fur is strewn across the ice after a dead seal is skinned by Inuit hunters on Resolute Bay, Canada, on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. The Inuit hunt seals for food, and the community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_1449.JPG
  • Tomi Salovinik 19  observer the ice for Seals during a seals hunt  next to a crack in the ice of Resolut Bay  Tuesday June 12 2007..Tomi Salovinik 19 hunting seals for food, every part of the seals is used or for food or for worm cloth.....
    _MG_7285.JPG
  • Inuit hunters on the way home after a day of hunting seals on frozen Resolute Bay, Canada, on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. The Inuit hunt seals for food, and their community uses every part of the seals, either by eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_0010.JPG
  • Inuit hunters on the way home after a day of hunting seals on frozen Resolute Bay, Canada, on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. The Inuit hunt seals for food, and their community uses every part of the seals, either by eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_0067.JPG
  • Manik, 16, smokes while taking a break from seal hunting in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. Inuit hunters like Manik hunt seals for food, and their community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see. ....
    _MG_7100.JPG
  • Inuit hunters (from left to right) PJ, age 17, Tomi Salovinik 19, Tomi, 12, Mark Ammarualik, Stivan Nangay, and Manik, 16, strap a seal to a sled after shooting it in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. The Inuit hunt seals for food, and the community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see. ..
    _MG_1355.JPG
  • Sasa Samson, 37, the best hunter in his town, pulls a seal from his breathing hole after being killed with a rifle in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. Sasa hunts seals for food, and his community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.  .. .. ..
    _MG_7415.JPG
  • Inuit hunters smoke while taking a break from seal hunting in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. Inuit hunters hunt seals for food, and their community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_7123.JPG
  • Sasa Samson, 37, the best seal hunter in his community,  drives his snowmobile with a rifle slung on his back on the way to a seal hunt in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007.  Sasa often stands next to the breathing hole of the seal without moving for 30 minutes or more to capture the animal with his hooked stick when it rises to the surface to breathe.  Sasa hunts seals for food, and his community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes.   The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures.  The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home.  Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment.  The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long.  Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before.  The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.....
    _MG_7374.JPG
  • Sasa Samson, age 37, the best Inuit hunter in the Inuit town of Resolute Bay, Canada, pulls a seal from its breathing hole on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. Sasa hunts seals for food, and his community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The Inuit still hunt sometimes with a traditional tool called a gaff. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_0050.JPG
  • Sasa Samson, age 37, the best Inuit hunter in the Inuit town of Resolute Bay, Canada, hunts seals with a gun on Tuesday, June 12, 2007.  Sasa hunts seals for food, and his community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. Sasa often stands next to the breathing hole of the seal without moving for 30 minutes or more to capture the animal with his hooked stick when it rises to the surface to breathe.   The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures.  The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home.  Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment.  The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long.  Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before.  The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see...
    _MG_7049.JPG
  • A trail of blood left by a seal runs along on the ice next to a breathing hole in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007.  Inuit hunters often stands next to the breathing hole of the seal without moving for 30 minutes or more to capture the animal with with a hooked stick when it rises to the surface to breathe.  The Inuit hunt seals for food, and their community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes.  .... The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures.  The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home.  Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment.  The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long.  Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before.  The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_7609.JPG
  • Sasa Samson, 37, and PJ, 17, tie down their gear for a seal hunt to their sled in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. Sasa, PJ, and others hunt seals for food, and their community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_7160.JPG
  • Canada Traditional Seal Hunting Threatened by Global Warming  ..Sasa Samson, age 37, the best Inuit hunter in the Inuit town of Resolute Bay, Canada, drives his snowmobile on the ice on the way to a Seal hunting expedition on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. Sasa hunts seals for food, and his community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.  ..
    _MG_0209.JPG
  • Sasa Samson, age 37, the best Inuit hunter in the Inuit town of Resolute Bay, Canada, stands next to the breathing hole of a seal on Tuesday, June 12, 2007.  Sasa hunts seals for food, and his community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. Sasa often stands next to the breathing hole of the seal without moving for 30 minutes or more to capture the animal with with his hooked stick when it rises to the surface to breathe.   .. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures.  The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home.  Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment.  The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long.  Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before.  The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_0085.JPG
  • Sasa Samson, 37, the best hunter in his community, pulls a seal from its breathing hole after shooting it with his rifle in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday June 12, 2007. Sasa hunts seals for food, and his community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see. ....
    _MG_7574.JPG
  • ..Sasa Samson, age 37, the best Inuit hunter in the Inuit town of Resolute Bay, Canada, pulls his sled above the breathing hole of a seal on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. Sasa hunts seals for food, and his community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see. ....
    _MG_0181.JPG
  • A dead seal lies next to a breathing hole seconds after being killed by an Inuit hunter in Resolute Bay, Canada, on Tuesday, June 12, 2007.  The Inuit hunt seals for food, and the community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. They often stand next to the breathing hole of the seal without moving for 30 minutes or more to capture the animal with a hooked stick when it rises to the surface to breathe.  The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures.  The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home.  Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment.  The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long.  Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before.  The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.h...
    _MG_0043.JPG
  • Sasa Samson, age 37, the best Inuit hunter in the Inuit town of Resolute Bay, Canada, pulls a seal from its breathing hole on Tuesday, June 12, 2007.  Sasa hunts seals for food, and his community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. Sasa often stands next to the breathing hole of the seal without moving for 30 minutes or more to capture the animal with with his hooked stick when it rises to the surface to breathe.   ..Standing beside Sasa and holding a gaff (a traditional tool used to hook seals) is P.J., aged 17, who often accompanies Sasa on the hunts.  .. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures.  The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home.  Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment.  The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long.  Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before.  The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_0055.JPG
  • Levi Kalouk and Carol Killittie hunt seals on the frozen ice of Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. Resolute Bay is a small bay on the south side of Cornwallis Island, located in the upper Canadian territory of Nunavut. The area is one of the northernmost habitated areas in the world, with 210 Inuit citizens confirmed in a 2001 census. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_0254.JPG
  • Sasa Samson 37 and Tomi Salovinik 19 , checking the ice next to the crack , to know from where thay can cross it on the way to hunt Seals in Resolute Bay. Tuesday June 12 2007
    _MG_7271.JPG
  • Sasa Samson 37 checks the rifle of Manik 16 in Resolute Bay. Tuesday June 12 2007.
    _MG_7296.JPG
  • Sasa Samson 37 next to his snowmobile and the seals that he hunts in Resolute Bay  ..Tuesday June 12 2007..
    _MG_7390.JPG
  • Sasa Samson 37 pulling a seal from his breathing hole after he shot him with his rifle in Resolute Bay. Tuesday June 12 2007....Sasa is the beast hunter of the Inuit town of Resolute bay...His hunts seals for food, every part of the seals is used or for food or for worm cloth...
    _MG_7400.JPG
  • Sasa Samson, 37, kills a seal using his gaff, a hooked stick, in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. Sasa, who is the best hunter in his town, hunts seals for food, and his community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_7445.JPG
  • Mark Ammarualik skins and cuts a seal in Resolute Bay, Canada on Tuesday, June 12, 2007. The Inuit hunt seals for food, and their community uses every part of the seals, either eating the meat or using the hides to make warm clothes. The traditional way of life in the Resolute Bay Inuit community is being threatened by rising temperatures. The dangers of global warming, which have been extensively documented by scientists, are appearing first, with rapid, drastic effects, in the Arctic regions where Inuit people make their home. Inuit communities, such as those living on Resolute Bay, have witnessed a wide variety of changes in their environment. The ice is melting sooner, depleting the seal population and leaving them unable to hunt the animals for as long. Other changes include seeing species of birds and insects (such as cockroaches and mosquitoes) which they have never encountered before. The Inuit actually lack words in their local languages to describe the creatures they have begun to see.
    _MG_7493.JPG
  • Tomi Paniloo- 12 hunting seals in Resolute Bay  at  Tuesday June 12 2007  ..Tomi start to hunt with his family 5 years ago...
    _MG_7562.JPG