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  • Pauline Melanson, a Royal Mounted Canadian Police officer, shops for her family's groceries in Iqualuit. Iqaluit, with a population of 6,000, is the largest community in Nunavut as well as the capital city. It is located in the southeast part of Baffin Island. Formerly known as Frobisher Bay, the town is at the mouth of the bay of that name, overlooking Koojesse Inlet. "Iqaluit" means 'place of many fish'. Canada. The image is part of a collection of images and documentation for Hungry Planet 2, a continuation of work done after publication of the book project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, by Peter Menzel & Faith D'Aluisio.
    CAN_061005_081_f1x.jpg
  • Pauline Melanson, a Royal Mounted Canadian Police officer, shops for her family's groceries in Iqualuit. Iqaluit, with a population of 6,000, is the largest community in Nunavut as well as the capital city. It is located in the southeast part of Baffin Island. The image is part of a collection of images and documentation for Hungry Planet 2, a continuation of work done after publication of the book project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, by Peter Menzel & Faith D'Aluisio.
    CAN_061005_052_f1x.jpg
  • HUNGRY PLANET2 Grocery List of families covered after the original Hungry Planet Family. The Melanson family consists of: Peter, 30, Pauline, 34, Joseph, 11, Jacob, 9, and Shane, 6. ONE WEEK'S FOOD IN October. The Melansons of Nunavut, Canada.Food Expenditure for One Week:.$350.13 US dollars.
    CAN_061005_150_f1x.jpg
  • As the main supply center for 500 miles in any direction, the general store in Ittoqqortoormiit, the bigger village (pop. 550) across the bay from Cap Hope, sells everything from guns to butter. Although such stores sell seal, musk ox, and other Arctic meats, most Greenlander families still obtain their meat from hunting. Hunting to feed the family is Emil Madsen's lifelong pursuit; taught to him by his father. Too fill his family's larder, Emil is often gone for a week or more. Not surprisingly, prices in the general store are high, but the Danish government heavily subsidizes Greenlanders' incomes to the tune of $6,786 per person in 1999, the latest year for which statistics are available. Geopolitically, Greenland is part of Denmark, hence the close ties of the people and the cross-immigration. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 153).
    GRE04_0009_xxf1rw.jpg
  • Seal hunter Emil Madsen's wife Erika cleans a seal shot by her husband at their home in Cap Hope, Greenland. (Emil Madsen is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) After cleaning, she will cook the best meat for her family, feed the remains to the sled dogs, then dry and sell the sealskin. Seal meat continues to be an important source of meat for some Greenlanders, but for many, Danish food has replaced it in the native diet.
    GRE_040521_041_xw.jpg
  • Erika Madsen of the small village of Cap Hope runs a small non-perishables shop for the KNR quasigovernment food concern. The Madsens buy any food that they don't hunt or fish at the larger KNR store in Ittoqqortoormiit, Greenland. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    GRE04_0241_xf1brw.jpg
  • Pauline Melanson unloading groceries in front of her family home, in Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada. The Melanson family consists of Peter, Pauline, Joseph, Jacob, and Shane. They live one street off "The Road To Nowhere," on a hill overlooking the town of Iqaluit in Canada's northeastern territory of Nunavut (just south of the Arctic Circle).
    CAN_061005_205_f1x.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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