Native people have long lived in harmony with nature, following the patterns of the weather for centuries. Now, science is listening. Scientific American reports that climatologists at the University of Colorado used information from two Canadian Inuit communities and scientific data in a recent study on shifting weather patterns.Scientists tracking weather for more than a decade recognized that native insight might eclipse the latest weather satellites and computer models. Elizabeth Weatherhead is an atmospheric scientist at the University of Colorado and lead author for this study. As she told Scientific American, "This is not the first scientific paper on Inuit knowledge. But it is the first paper linking that Inuit knowledge to more scientific approaches."
Katherine Butler, a regular contributor to the Mother Nature Network, writes from Los Angeles.
Related Articles on Mother Nature Network:
9 not-so-crazy ideas to combat climate change
5 natural events that science can't explain
Photo (cc) by Flickr user paukrus




























