A veteran journalist explores the changing Arctic and why it should matter to the rest of the world. In one hundred years, or even fifty, the Arctic will look dramatically different than it does today. As polar ice retreats and animals and plants migrate northward, the arctic landscape is morphing into something new and very different from what it once was. While these changes may seem remote, they will have a profound impact on a host of global issues, from international politics to animal migrations. In Future Arctic, journalist and explorer Edward Struzik offers a clear-eyed look at the rapidly shifting dynamics in the Arctic region, a harbinger of changes that will reverberate throughout our entire world. A unique combination of extensive on-the-ground research, compelling storytelling, and policy analysis, Future Arctic offers a new look at the changes occurring in this remote, mysterious region and their far-reaching effects.
Introduction
Chapter 1. Eight Foot Tall Beavers, Scimitar Cats, and Three Toed Horses: What the Past Tells Us about the Future Arctic
Chapter 2: Tar Sands, Dams, and Deltas
Chapter 3: Ocean Currents
Chapter 4: Polar Bears and Killer Whales
Chapter 5: The End of Migration
Chapter 6: Caribou, Muskox, and Bison: Prey, Tell Us what the Future of the Arctic will be?
Chapter 7: Hybridization and the Rise of New Animals in the Arctic
Chapter 8: Falling into the Sea: Erosion, Receding Ice, and Vulnerable Shorelines
Chapter 9: Oil and Ice, "Drill Baby Drill"
Chapter 10: Redrawing the Map of the Arctic: Shifting Territorial Boundaries and an Arctic Treaty
Conclusion
Edward Struzik has been writing about the Arctic for more than thirty-five years. In 1996 he was awarded the prestigious Knight Science Journalism Fellowship and spent a year at Harvard and MIT researching polar issues. In 2008, he was awarded the Atkinson Fellowship in Public Policy. In 2009, Wiley published his book, The Big Thaw: Travels in the Melting North, focused on the effects of climate change on the Canadian Arctic. He is an active speaker and lecturer, and is frequently interviewed as an expert on Arctic issues. He was recently invited to be part of a six-person expert Arctic Advisory panel by the World Wildlife Fund.
"Struzik blends biology and politics with firsthand experience to present a comprehensive [...] portrait of the future."
– Publishers Weekly
"Struzik's travel vignettes and discussion about the north are compelling."
– Library Journal
"Struzik's book is a thoughtful and impassioned argument that we need to respond to a warming world by researching, adapting, and changing what we are able to."
– Pacific Standard
"An urgent, passionate defense of ecological conservation and understanding."
– Kirkus
"An engaging new account of a planet transformed."
– Salon
"In Future Arctic, the intrepid explorer shares tales of his adventures, from surviving a terrifying peregrine falcon attack and tracking polar bears to navigating an anomalous Arctic cyclonic storm and living in native communities [...] The author views the Arctic through the lenses of archaeology, geology, anthropology, and ecology to draw a unique picture of where the sensitive region has been and where it might be headed."
– The Scientist
"Journalist and explorer Edward Struzik cogently analyses the environmental and policy challenges, drawing on research into past extinctions and present disruptions such as tar-sand exploitation, military territorialism and tundra fires. As he ticks off the costs to indigenous peoples, ocean biodiversity, caribou habitat and more, the case for an Arctic treaty and serious conservation efforts becomes ever clearer."
– Nature
"A broad, comprehensive, and fair-minded look at not only the upheaval in the Arctic, but what should be done about it."
– Mongabay
"From a review of the Arctic's exploration history to an analysis of the many governmental failures there, Struzik makes the case for the Arctic's unique place in the world and stresses that undeniable change has already occurred, and that coping with change and planning for the future are mandatory [...] A bracing read."
– Booklist
"Provocative [...] detailed, impeccably reported exploration of how man-made climate change is already reshaping the Arctic [...] The Arctic's future isn't bright, says Struzik, but it is adaptable, if we're smart. In any case, it is inevitable, and Future Arctic is a must-read for lovers of the far north and climate change realists."
– Outside Online
"Struzik asks questions of wildlife scientists, military strategists, and indigenous peoples, and paints a complex picture with their stories."
– BeautifulNow
"This book is a fascinating collection of firsthand obervations and insights gleaned from decades of travels with scientists across the Arctic [...] Though many scientific assessments of Arctic change have been produced, none are as readable or engaging as Future Arctic, and that is what makes this book so important."
– Conservation Biology
" [...] a timely contribution to the global discussion of the Arctic's value to economics, culture, and the environment."
– CHOICE
"Future Arctic is marvelous – as a long-time arctic reseracher, I can honestly say it is the best book that I have seen dealing with the challenges facing the region. A masterful examination of the past, present, and future status of the Arctic, it is also very enjoyable reading, storytelling at its best."
– Vera Alexander, Professor and Dean Emerita, University of Alaska Fairbanks
"No journalist has traveled more widely in the North American Arctic or understands the region better than Ed Struzik. In Future Arctic he has written a fascinating and vitally important book about the swift changes sweeping across the Far North. If you want to see where the world is headed in an era of rapid warming, this is the book to read."
– Fen Montaigne, author of Fraser's Penguins
"Few places on earth are changing as fast as the high Arctic, and few have told the story as compellingly as Ed Struzik."
– Bill McKibben, author of Eaarth
"Future Arctic is a powerful, provocative, personal look at the Arctic in all its wonder and uncertainty. Ed Struzik has the experience to connect stories that are too often told separately, with vigorous writing and first-hand insight. Be ready to think carefully about what Arctic change means for all of us."
– Henry P. Huntington, Arctic scientist and co-chair of the USNAS report The Arctic in the Anthropocene
"In this engaging and powerful book, Ed Struzik draws on firsthand experience and analysis of policy decisions to provide a detailed account of Arctic ecosystems stressed by shifting weather patterns, pollutants and disease. Through Struzik's compelling insights the reader can begin to draw connections between Arctic environmental change and events occurring elsewhere much further south."
– Erica Dingman, Director, Arctic in Context, World Policy Institute