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Alberta researcher and expert in Arctic climate dies while conducting field work in Nunavut

University of Alberta researcherMaya Bhatia, who specialized in the study of Arctic climate issues, died while doing field work in the Nunavut hamlet ofGrise Fiord.

No information about circumstances around death of U of A professor Maya Bhatia

A scenic shot of sunlight glinting off water against a dramatic sky, with ice and snow.
University of Alberta researcher Maya Bhatia had travelled numerous times to Grise Fiord, Canada's northernmost community, pictured here in October 2020. (Matisse Harvey/Radio-Canada)

A University of Alberta researcherwho specialized in the study of Arctic climate issues died while doing field work in the Nunavut hamlet ofGrise Fiord.

Maya Bhatia, abiogeochemist andassociate professor in the U of A's science faculty, died Aug. 16 while on one of her many research trips into the Inuit community, the U of A said.

"This is a devastating loss for the University of Alberta community," noted a statement posted on The Quad, the U of A'sfaculty and staff publication.

No information has been released about the circumstances of Bhatia's death. Nunavut RCMP said they are working with the territory's emergency management team on its search efforts.

Nunavut's chief coroner Khen Sagadraca said Bhatia's death is being looked at under the territorial Presumption of Death Act. He said he isunable to investigate the death without a body.

"Therefore, the individual is considered missing," Sagadraca said.

Through her work, Bhatia "sought to answer questions of concern to the community, including water quality and climate change," the university said.

Bhatia came to the U of A in 2017.Her work included leading a team of Canadian researchers who were examining melting glaciers, ice caps and ice sheetsto learn more about the affect of future climate warming on Arctic coastal productivity, according to the statement on The Quad.

"Every day, researchers at our university contribute to the ever-widening network of information we use to understand ourselves and our world," said Gordon Swaters, president of the Association of Academic Staff University of Alberta, in a statement.

"Dr. Bhatia was one of those researchers an outstanding scientist engaged in vital work, and it is a horrible tragedy to lose her."

The University of Alberta said it will not be releasing further details.

"The university is in the process of working with relevant agencies in completing the required occupational health and safety investigation into this incident," it said in a statement. "We are respecting the family's wishes for privacy."

Grise Fiord isCanada's most northerly community with a population of about 140. Itis located on Ellesmere Island, about 1,500 kilometres south of the North Pole.