How to Build an Igloo
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A demonstration of igloo-building in Canada's Far North, showing how the site is selected and how blocks of snow are used to make a snug shelter in only an hour and a half. As the camera follows each stage, the commentary explains the process.
Citation
Main credits
Wilkinson, Douglas (film director)
Wilkinson, Douglas (narrator)
Other credits
Edited by Neil Harris.
Distributor subjects
No distributor subjects provided.Keywords
WEBVTT
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[music]
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The Eskimo word \'igloo\' means house.
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To the natives of the Canadian Eastern
Arctic, igloo is the snow house.
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Built of snow blocks cut
from the hard-packed drifts,
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an igloo provides the Eskimo with
shelter during the long winter months.
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Easy to build once you know how,
his home is compact and strong.
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The igloo gains strength
from its ingenious design.
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After the first row of blocks
has been put in place,
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one block is cut to
form a sloping surface.
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The second row is started on this slope and
the blocks built up in a continuous spiral,
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the key to the whole structure.
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On the west shore of Hudson\'s Bay,
the low rolling terrain offers
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little protection against the
bitter cold of the Northwest wind.
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Chupak and [?], having left their
families and the igloos of the winter camp
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are coming into the post to trade.
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They look forward to a mug-up of tea and
pilot biscuits at the traders\' house.
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The two Eskimos admire the
wooden buildings of the white man,
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but for their own dwelling,
they will build an igloo.
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First, [?], the elder of the
two, selects a suitable site.
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With his probe, he tests the snow.
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It must be hard-packed and yet
not so hard that it will not cut.
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It must not be layered with streaks
of soft snow that would cause it
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to break in handling, and there
must be sufficient good snow
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in one place to provide all the
building material for his igloo.
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This isn\'t always as easy as it
seems, for the average snowfall
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of the Arctic is less than in
the temperate regions of Canada.
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Like all good architects, they use
the material found around them.
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The snow will be both bricks and mortar.
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Packed hard by the constant
wind, it can be cut by a snow knife
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or ordinary handsaw into
blocks of any size or shape.
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The first blocks are cut
from a rectangular trench,
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which often serves as the entrance
tunnel to the completed igloo.
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A row of heel marks is sometimes used as
a baseline for the first row of blocks.
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The igloo must be nearly circular.
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Otherwise, when a construction nears
the top, the wall will collapse.
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From a lifetime of living with
it, the Eskimo knows his snow.
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Providing it is of good quality, he
can build the igloo entirely from snow
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found within the circle of the walls.
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Since the blocks are taken from
inside the circle, the actual floor
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of the igloo will be the depth of one block
below the surface of the snow outside.
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After the first row has
been erected, the cut to form
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the sloping surface is made.
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The next row starts on this slope
and the upward spiral begins.
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When building an igloo for an overnight
shelter, the Eskimo works quickly,
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but for a more permanent dwelling, he takes
his time fitting each block carefully to
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the previous one and to the one below.
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A single Eskimo can build an overnight igloo
in 40 minutes or he can spend two days
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constructing a large comfortable
dwelling for himself and his family.
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The Eskimo is a nomad.
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His need is for a temporary home,
but who knows how long he will stay?
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His home gets dirty, he moves
out and builds a new one.
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If hunting is bad, he
goes off in search of food,
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building his new house
where game is plentiful.
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The Eskimo builds his home around
him, always working from the inside.
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He has cut the first row of blocks
so as to have a slight inward lean,
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which will gradually become more
acute as the walls grow higher.
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Being right-handed, Chupak works
in an anti-clockwise direction.
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Left-handed Eskimos build
in the opposite direction.
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As the inward lean becomes more
acute, greater care must be taken
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in fitting the blocks together.
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The edges of each block are
beveled so that it gains support from
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the previous one and
from the one below.
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Blocks will vary in size,
but are usually about
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3 feet by 2 feet
by 4 inches thick.
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Gradually, the spiral design
and the inward lean of the blocks
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produces the familiar
rounded beehive shape.
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This rounded shape is another
excellent example of good use
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of the fundamental
laws of architecture.
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Engineers and architects have found
no better way of building an igloo.
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It has no corners and no waste space.
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Although the temperature is 40
below, the exertion of building
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causes both Eskimos to perspire
freely within the snow walls of
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their almost completed igloo.
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Setting the last few blocks
in place is a ticklish job.
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Unless well-fitted, they
could easily fall in.
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The Eskimo\'s only construction
tool is his snow knife.
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He uses it for cutting the blocks,
shaping them, and fitting them together.
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Originally, it was made of
bone or ivory, but now he buys
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a steel one from the trader
for about the value of a fox skin.
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Still using snow from inside the
igloo, the last block is shoved out
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through the narrow
opening and trimmed to fit.
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Not until this key block is inserted
and fitted like the keystone of an arch
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will the igloo take its final strength.
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After it has been completed, the
warmth of the inside combined
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with the wind on the outside will
cement the blocks firmly together.
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The igloo will be strong enough
to support a man\'s weight,
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although a sharp blow the fist
might punch a hole in the snow wall.
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Like the man who paints
himself into a corner,
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the Eskimo has built
himself into his house.
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Cutting his way out, he forms
the doorway of the igloo.
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The last construction job is chinking.
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All cracks on the outer
surface are plugged with snow
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so that no drafts
can reach the interior.
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It has taken the two Eskimos
one and a half hours to build
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their igloo for the night.
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Caribou sleeping robes and extra
skins to cover the sleeping platform
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provide perfect insulation
against the cold snow.
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[?] and Chupak settle snugly inside
using a snow block to close the door,
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a hole in the roof serves as a ventilator
and heat control, while fresh air
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comes from a small hole near the door.
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The short daylight hours of the
Arctic winter draw to a close.
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After a meal of frozen fish or walrus,
the dogs bed down for the night,
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nose buried under tail, thick
coats protecting them from the cold,
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each in his chosen spot on the snow.
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\"Igloo [?],\" says
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[?].
\"It is warm.
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This is my home.\"
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[music]