Nordicity
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Nordicity is the degree of northernness. The concept was developed by Canadian geographer Louis-Edmond Hamelin in the 1960s based on previous work done in the Soviet Union. Hamelin's point was that northern territories – like northern Canada – cannot be identified based on a single criterion, but that there was a continuum based on a number of natural and human factors.
Hamelin developed an index he called Valeur polaires (Polar values) or VAPO, where the North Pole had a VAPO of 1000. The nordicity index had 10 natural and human components:
- latitude
- summer heat
- annual cold
- types of ice
- total precipitation
- natural vegetation cover
- accessibility by means other than air
- air service
- population
- degree of economic activity
Each component was graded on the scale of 0-100 where 100 represented extreme nordicity. Hamelin proposed that areas with a VAPO of more than 200 should be considered in "the North". He subdivided Canada into Extreme North, Far North, Middle North, and Near North based on their VAPO. Using the VAPO, most of Canada outside the Southern Vancouver Island and the Lower Mainland, the Prairies, the Quebec City-Windsor Corridor, and most of the Maritimes exhibits some degree of nordicity. [1]. At the other end, the Extreme North included the northern portion of Canada's Arctic Archipelago. The rest of the archipelago and tundra zone as well as parts of the boreal forest were included in the Far North.
The term is used by the Canadian government that has a set system for measuring nordicity. This system is used for determining a number of regulations in fields such as environmental protection, infrastructure, and many others. Northern Canada, apropos, is normally divided into three areas. The Middle North covering the northern parts of most provinces, as well as parts of the territories is largely populated by those of European descent and has significant resource extraction if a low population. The Far North covers the northern part of the continent and the southern Arctic Archipelago. The Extreme North covers the northernmost islands and is largely uninhabitable. Other countries have their own systems of measuring nordicity.
The idea of nordicity and the changing conceptions of what is the north has also recently become a subject for historians.
[edit] References
- Amanda Graham. "Indexing the Canadian North: Broadening the Definition", The Northern Review #6 (Winter 1990): 21-37. ISSN 0835-3433.
- Louis-Edmond Hamelin. Canadian Nordicity: It's Your North, Too. Montreal: Harvest House, 1979. ISBN 0-88772-174-5
- Chuck McNiven and Henry Puderer, Delineation of Canada's North: An Examination of the North–South Relationship in Canada. Geography Division, Statistics Canada, January 2000. Catalogue no. 2F0138MIE, no. 2000-3. ISSN 1481-174X.