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Showing matches for "Indigenous knowledge"
Two-eyed seeing: Embracing the power of Indigenous knowledge for a healthy and sustainable Ocean
Overview
> One of the richest sources of information that Indigenous People bring to knowledge-pairing partnerships are the direct, year-round observations made by people out on the land and on the sea, over many generations. A “two-eyed seeing” approach that combines Indigenous and western knowledge systems is crucial for protecting the ocean, according to co-authors behind a new [*PLOS Biology Perspectives*](https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3001876) piece. The article, supported by Ocean Networks Canada (ONC), acknowledges the marginalization and exploitation of Indigenous marine ocean knowledge acquired through millennia of lived experience and observation. It also identifies a path forward for pursuing genuine ocean science partnerships. “Two-eyed seeing: Embracing the power of Indigenous knowledge for a healthy and sustainable Ocean”, was published in fall 2022 in *PLOS Biology*. It was the result of panel discussions held during sessions at the Partnership for the Observation of the Global Ocean (POGO) in January 2021 and 2022. The international group of co-authors are panelists Kelsey Leonard, assistant professor, University of Waterloo; Pier Luigi Buttigeig, digital knowledge steward & senior data scientist at GEOMAR; Maui Hudson, associate professor, University of Waikato; Ken Paul, Wolastoqey Nation; Jay Pearlman, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE); and Kim Juniper, chief scientist at ONC. The co-authors say that even well-intentioned scientific research has caused hardship for Indigenous Peoples when they have not been involved in its design and application. For example, creating a census of marine life—vital to biodiversity conservation or tracking the effects of climate change—is incomplete if it ignores Indigenous knowledge, and potentially harmful if it results in uniform regulatory controls on Indigenous Peoples’ access to ceremonial, cultural, and subsistence fisheries. Instead, they say a better path forward is to require and resource genuine co-creation between western science and Indigenous coastal communities from projects’ outset - including respect for the Indigenous ethics frameworks, such as two-eyed seeing, and for their decision-making status as Ocean rightsholders. Since 2007, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples has recognized that respect for Indigenous knowledge, cultures, and traditional practices contributes to sustainable and equitable protection of the environment. Lead author Kelsey Leonard says there is a global shift underway from a colonial, extractive way of thinking to a more inclusive approach, but those commitments need to ripple out. She says engagement with Indigenous communities should be from start-to-finish, not fly in, and fly out. “The best partnerships are not a hierarchy as we all have something to bring to the table,” she says. "This is an opportunity for people to reflect on their own commitment to including Indigenous knowledge in ocean science activities, and to shape a better inclusive future for Indigenous communities and for a sustainable ocean.” So how does this look in practice? The authors say that when designing an ocean research, observation, or monitoring project, scientists must engage Indigenous communities at an early stage to co-create project goals and methods, and throughout. Questions can be as simple as: ““How do we work together to make sure it is a reciprocal relationship?”; and, of equal importance, “How does this benefit the ocean?" The article also shares personal insights from POGO-22 panelist Austin Ahmasuk from the Kawerak Marine Program in Alaska, about how Indigenous communities sounded an alarm about the climate change impacts they were seeing in the Arctic ocean and landscapes, decades before most of the world took notice. “There is a race to the Arctic to understand change ... how it impacts communities,” Ahmusuk said. “Unfortunately, though, Arctic communities are not always involved in how the research is designed, how it’s planned or how that research can benefit our communities.” ONC chief scientist and co-author Kim Juniper says ONC is committed to empowering Indigenous and coastal community leadership through partnerships that support community-led ocean observatories on all three coasts of Canada, and by sharing multiple ways of knowing in the development and delivery of ocean science education and outreach. *Hero image: Totem poles on the coastline, Sechelt, British Columbia.*
Discover Pacific sea life in the Canadian Museum of Nature
Overview
A new permanent exhibition showcasing sea creatures that thrive in west coast tide-pool environments and their connection to coastal Indigenous peoples can now be visited at the Canadian Museum of Nature in Ottawa. The [Pacific Discovery Tank](https://nature.ca/en/visit-us/whats-on/listing/pacific-discovery-tank/) exhibit is the result of a partnership between Ocean Networks Canada, the Canadian Museum of Nature and the Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council. There visitors will encounter live sea stars, sea cucumbers, tentacled anemones and spiky urchins, and learn of their importance to coastal Indigenous communities in British Columbia. The sea creatures have traveled all the way from the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve which lies within the traditional territory of the Nuu-chah-nulth First Nations. Nuu-chah-nulth people not only use coastal resources for sustenance, but also protect and take care of them. In each community, a person inherits the role of being the beach keeper. It is their responsibility to ensure the health of the seashore for present and future generations, explains [Pieter Romer](https://www.oceannetworks.ca/people/pieter-romer/), ONC Indigenous Community Liaison. > “By integrating Indigenous place-based knowledge within this live tank exhibit, visitors can learn about the importance of sustaining these species in their own local coastal environment as well as better understand Indigenous Peoples’ cultural connection to the ocean.”
New documentary explores history of West Coast tsunamis from Indigenous perspective
Overview
MEDIA ADVISORY > “We know in our family history that we are the survivors of the last big earthquakes, the big tsunamis.” - Hesquiaht carver and painter, Tim Paul. Learn about the rich history of tsunami resilience on the Pacific West Coast, and how combining traditional Indigenous Knowledge with ocean science can better prepare communities for the next “big one”, as shown in the new documentary *Tsunami 11th Relative*, which premieres during its Vancouver Island spring tour that starts this week. The Ocean Networks Canada (ONC) supported documentary shares Indigenous Knowledge of past ‘great saltwater floods’ that reached northwest Vancouver Island, told through a tapestry of stories set against the backdrop of the rich, natural beauty of the island. One of these stories includes a magnitude nine earthquake that occurred in the Cascadia subduction zone on January 26, 1700, producing a tsunami so large it reached the top of mountains. This knowledge has impacted modern practices such as communities’ installing back-up solar power generation on higher ground. [Pieter Romer](https://www.oceannetworks.ca/people/pieter-romer/), the documentary producer/director and ONC Indigenous Community Liaison, says Indigenous Peoples’ survival and adaptations in the face of past devastating earthquakes and tsunamis are woven into the stories handed down through generations. “I learned from Nuu-chah-nulth artist, Tim Paul, who was taught by his grandmother, that sky, sun, moon, mountains, rivers, lakes, land, sea, wind and stars are all our relatives. Earthquake/Tsunami is our 11th relative which is intended to teach humility - remind us of our place in this world and that we are the very smallest part of this universe.”
Minutes-to-hours: arrival times for tsunami on BC coast
Overview
Ocean Networks Canada (ONC) is developing a coastal hazard assessment framework that utilises a [two-eyed seeing approach](https://www.oceannetworks.ca/news-and-stories/stories/two-eyed-seeing-embracing-the-power-of-indigenous-knowledge-for-a-healthy-and-sustainable-ocean/), interweaving Indigenous knowledge with its tsunami and flood hazard modelling services. Results from these assessments–which include the estimated arrival times and flooding extent of earthquake-induced tsunamis on the British Columbia (BC) coast–are being used to support emergency planning for coastal communities. BC communities are particularly vulnerable to tsunamis because of their proximity to the seismically active Alaska-Aleutian and the Cascadia subduction zones, which are capable of producing megathrust earthquakes. In two articles (accessible [here](https://tos.org/oceanography/article/assessment-of-tsunami-hazard-along-british-columbia-coastlines-from-coseismic-sources), and [here](https://tos.org/oceanography/article/integrating-topographic-and-bathymetric-data-for-high-resolution-digital-elevation-modeling-to-support-tsunami-hazard-mapping)) published in *Oceanography Magazine* this year, ONC researchers discussed results from a series of collaborative tsunami hazard assessments undertaken along the west coast of Canada.
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