Polar ice loss 'painful to see' for photographer Camille Seaman - Action News
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IndigenousPhotos

Polar ice loss 'painful to see' for photographer Camille Seaman

Little did San Francisco-based photographer Camille Seaman know a bumped Alaska Airlines flight would launch an unshakable compulsion to take pictures of icebergs in some of the most extreme environments on Earth.

Newest artist-in-residence at Denali National Park worried about climate change

It was by chance that Camille Seaman first travelled north a bumped flight on Alaska Airlines led to a free trip to Kotzebueon the Bering Strait.

Little did the San Francisco-based photographerknow it was the beginning of a decade-long quest, an unshakable compulsion to take pictures of icebergs in some of the most extreme environments on Earth.

At the time, she simply wanted to document beautyin visually stunning vistas of the Arctic and Antarctica.

She wasnt thinking about climate change then, but as the newest artist-in-residence at Denali National Park in central Alaska, its top of mind now. On her last Arctic sailing in 2011, she says there was almost no ice.

"There was nothing on the radar for ice,"she said. "We could have kept going [to the North Pole], if we had enough fuel. It just shouldnt be."

A grandfathers teachings

Part Native American, Seaman attributes her environmental awareness to her childhood spent near the Shinnecock Reservation in New York State, andespecially tothe teachings of her grandfather.

He would take her for long walks in the woods to introduce her, individually, to trees.

"He really required that you stop at each tree and acknowledge it physically, place your hands on itand feel its life force, its physical structure, and understand its a relative to you."

It's painful to see the devastationto know what is being lost, and what we may not get back.-Camille Seaman

She later brought her grandfathers sensibilities to her polar art.

While working as an expedition photographer aboard science vessels and commercials ships, she approached each photograph of an iceberg as if it was a portrait of an ancestor: "I've never met two which were alike."

She compiled those photos and stories in a new book titled Melting Away: A Ten-Year Journey through Our Endangered Polar Regions.

"It's painful to see the devastation,"saidSeaman. "It's painful to know what is being lost, and what we may not get back."

Front lines of climate change

Though she stopped her polar explorations in 2011 "I acknowledge Im part of the problem"she jumped at the opportunity to visit Denali because she sees Alaska as one of the front lines of climate changein the United States.

"No one can deny what Alaskans are experiencing and witnessing first-hand."

"I can't say making a photo is very important. In fact I feel sad it's all I can do. But that's what I'm gonna do." (Camille Seaman)
Scientists say climate change is altering the park's landscape in many waysfrom forests of so-called "drunken trees" leaning against each other as permafrost thawsto tree lines creeping up the mountainside that affecthabitat of the iconic Dall sheep.

Of course, theres also Alaskas retreating glaciers, which Canadian glaciologist Joanna Young views as canaries in the coal mine.

"They are a great metric to show us that climate change is real and that these changes are happening at an accelerating rate,"saidYoung, who works at the University of Alaska.

"Once society realizes this is a real issue, we can start thinking more along the lines of mitigation and adaptation."

Seaman will be fresh off her residency at Denali National Park when she arrives in Vancouver this monthto attend the 2015 TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) Conference.

She was named a Senior TED fellowafter her popular talks featuring her photos of icebergs and storm chasing.

Watch Duncans feature story about Camille Seaman and her polar photography tonight on CBC's The National.