Aurora Borealis with a Trail of Airplane Landing Lights, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Construction Workers, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Everton from Jamaica, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
The Edge of Town, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Children's Play Lot on the Plateau, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Sled Dog Waiting for the Winter Season, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
River Landscape, Road to Nowhere, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Houses with tv, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Anna, Iqaluit, CA 2016
Anna 2, Iqaluit, CA 2016
Adamee and Lisa's Shed, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Several sheds along the beach were being lived in by local Inuit people.
Adamee and Lisa in Their Shed, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Adamee and Lisa are retired. After raising five children, owning a house and two cars, and working all their lives, they've decided to shed their material life and go back to basics.
Evening Fog, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Lake and Road to Nowhere, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Heading Out to Hunt, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Rocks and Water, Sylvia Grinnell Territory Park, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Crossing the Tundra in the Fog, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Jutani 2 HERO, Iqaluit, CA 2016
Picking Wild Blueberries, Sylvia Grinnell Territory Park, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Berries grow wild all over the tundra and in the fall they are plentiful and a popular pass time for locals.
Little Mushroom on the Tundra, Sylvia Grinnell Territory Park, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Two Inuit Girls, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Steven, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Steven manages a small recycling facility collecting aluminum cans throughout the year. Every six months they bag the cans up and tow them out to a ship that takes them back to the mainland to be recycled.
High School, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Casey, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Working on the Boat During Low Tide, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
House on a Hill, Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada
Repurposed Shipping Containers, North 40, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Giant Chainlink, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Thousands of these chain links were buried in the sand near the beach. Each one is about 24 inches in length and weighs about 200 pounds. They're probably used to prevent erosion.
Jacobie, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Scarred Landscape 3, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
A stack of oil barrels lying on the tundra unattended.
Rocks and River, Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
An Inuit Woman Wearing Her Traditional Amauti Clothing, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Four Inuit Children, Iqaluit, CA 2016
Tundra Valley Neighborhood, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
A Childs Play Fort, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Green-Red House, Iqaluit, Canada 2016
Real estate prices in Iqaluit are out of sight. Houses of this quality and size are worth around $750,000 Canadian.