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To track the whales, Laidre and Heide-Jorgensen have collaborated with hunters on Greenland's west coast and were just starting to build relationships in the village of Niaqornat when I asked to tag along. We would arrive in late October and the scientists would remain through mid-November, as darkness descended and the ice glided into the fjords, and the pods of whales, which they suspect summer in Melville Bay several hundred miles north, made their way south. It was a time frame that some of Laidre's colleagues in Seattle, many of them climate scientists who prefer to study the Arctic via buoy and robotic plane, considered vaguely insane.
Laidre, of course, was optimistic.
When Laidre, Heide-Jorgensen and I first reached the village, after a two-hour boat ride that involved rounding icebergs in the inky blackness of a late arctic afternoon, the sled dogs greeted us like hysterical fans at a rock concert while villagers crowded the boat, reaching in to pull out our luggage and hollering at Laidre in Greenlandic.
Niaqornat ( pop. 60) is on a tongue of land in Baffin Bay inside the Arctic Circle. The settlement sits hard against a white wall of mountains, where men hunting arctic grouse leave tiny red droplets in their footsteps on the slopes: blackberries crushed under the snow. Greenland has its own home-rule government but remains a Danish possession, and thanks to the Danish influence the town is fully wired, with personal computers glowing like hearths in almost every living room. But none of the houses, including the drafty three-room field station used by Laidre and other scientists, has plumbing or running water; the kerosene stoves that keep the water from freezing are easily puffed out by the ripping wind, which also brings waves bashing against the town's scrap of black beach.
With its tide line of pulverized ice crystals, the beach is the chaotic center of village life, scattered with oil drums, anchors and the hunters' little open boats, some of which are decorated with arctic fox tails like lucky giant rabbit's feet. There are waterfront drying racks hung with seal ribs, waxen-looking strips of shark and other fish, and the occasional musk ox head masked with ice. Throughout the town, sled dogs are staked to the frozen ground; there are at least three times as many dogs as people.
Signs of narwhals are everywhere, especially now that the tusk market has been shut down and hunters can't sell the ivory for gas money and other expenses. The whales' undeveloped inner teeth are strung up over front porches like clothespins on a line. A thick tooth is proudly mounted on the wall of the little building that serves as the town hall, school, library and church (complete with sealskin kneelers). It seems the fashion to lean a big tusk across a house's front window.
"There are months when no supplies are coming into the town, and people depend only on what they pull out of the sea," Laidre told me. "The arrival of these whales is a small window of opportunity, and hunters have to have an extremely deep knowledge of how they behave."
The narwhals typically arrive in November, darting into the fjord in pursuit of gonatus squid, and Niaqornat men in motorboats shoot the animals with rifles. But in the springtime, when the whales pass by again on their way north, the hunters work in the old way, driving their dog sleds out into the ice-covered fjord. Then they creep in single file, wearing sealskin boots so as not to make a sound—even a clenched toe can make the ice creak. They get as close as they can to the surfacing whales, then hurl their harpoons.
In the darkness they can tell the difference between a beluga and a narwhal by the sound of their breathing. And if the hunters can't hear anything, they search them out by smell. "They smell like blubber," a young man told me.
During the Middle Ages, and even earlier, narwhal tusk was sold in Europe and the Far East as unicorn horn. Physicians believed that powdered unicorn horn could cure ills from plague to rabies and even raise the dead. It seems also to have been marketed as a precursor to Viagra, and it rivaled snake's tongue and griffin's claw as a detector of poison. Since poisonings were all the rage in medieval times, "unicorn horn" became one of the most coveted substances in Europe, worth ten times its weight in gold. French monarchs dined with narwhal-tooth utensils; Martin Luther was fed powdered tusk as medicine before he died. The ivory spiral was used to make the scepter of the Hapsburgs, Ivan the Terrible's staff, the sword of Charles the Bold.
Historians have not definitively identified where the ancient tusks originated, though one theory is that the narwhals were harvested in the Siberian Arctic (where, for unknown reasons, they no longer live). But in the late 900s the Vikings happened upon Greenland, swarming with narwhals, their teeth more precious than polar bear pelts and the live falcons they could hawk to Arabian princes. Norse longboats rowed north in pursuit of the toothed whales, braving summer storms to trade with the Skraelings, as the Vikings called the Inuit, whom they despised.
Related topics: Whales Weird Animals Biology Arctic Ocean
Additional Sources
Greenland's Winter Whales: The beluga, the narwhal and the bowhead whale by Mads Peter Heide-Jorgensen and Kristin Laidre, Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, c. Ilinniusiorfik Undervisningsmiddelforlag, 2006
"Winter Feeding Intensity of Narwhals (Monodon Monoceros)" by K. L. Laidre, School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington (Seattle), and M. P. Heide-Jorgensen, Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, Nuuk, Greenland, Marine Mammal Science, January 2005


Comments
a nice picture of mysterious narwhal. great picture!!!
Posted by abigail liang on April 21,2009 | 05:44PM
I so enjoyed reading the article on the narwhal. We have a floor lamp made from a narwhal tusk. My husband's grandfather was a sea captain in the early 1900s and brought it home to Yarmouth NS, Canada where someone had it wired and made into a lamp which we use every day. I would be interested to know if this is legal to sell because of the age. My husband and i are in our 70s and 80s so we might possibly have an auction in the near future.
Posted by Marcie Rogers on April 23,2009 | 07:32AM
Marcie, The author advised in the article that "It has been illegal to import narwhal tusk into the United States since the 1972 Marine Mammal Protection Act, but material known to have entered the nation earlier can be bought and sold." Therefore, it would appear your fine to sell the ivory. However, if it was mine, I would hand it down to your husband's family members so his family has a connection to the past. (along with other personal effects from your husband's grandfather)
Posted by Steven Rowell on April 24,2009 | 08:35AM
Is the book Greenland's Winter Whales available in the US? It does not come up in a search of Amazon.com nor bookfinder.com Thank you.
Posted by Lee Barnhardt on April 27,2009 | 03:51PM
Just finished reading this, what an amazing story. Kudos to Ms. Laidre for taking on such an amazing and elusive animal for study. Such single minded focus, I hope that her efforts are rewarded handsomely and the scientific community benefits from her efforts.
Posted by Gene Harrison on April 27,2009 | 07:33PM
What majestic creatures!
Posted by Katie on April 29,2009 | 08:34AM
Marcie Rogers--instead of seeking to profit from your narwhal tush, why don't you donate it to a museum or place like the Smithsonian so future generations and the scientific community can benefit?
Posted by Melitta on May 1,2009 | 08:57AM
Congrats to Ms. Laidre, I know her from UW and the professor she worked with and being a fellow dancer turned scientist she has inspired me to keep doing both, which I am equally passionate about although my animal is Killer Whales.
Posted by Kailey Genther on May 3,2009 | 10:26PM
awww. i want a narwhal
Posted by melissa on May 4,2009 | 10:13AM
A fantastic piece of writing.
Posted by Chris on May 7,2009 | 07:25AM
I hope she never catches this animal, because their goals are too cruel.
Posted by Nikita Kondraskov on May 7,2009 | 05:46PM
Very revealing. The resemblance between narwhal tusks and the unicorn horns seen in paintings is remarkable.
Posted by Cleve on May 8,2009 | 11:20AM
Thanks I so surprised and enjoyed reading about narwhal and Kristin Laidre.I wish all the best to Kristin.
Posted by Piret Kerem on May 12,2009 | 11:23PM
Not only did I enjoy the topic of this article, but I was thoroughly impressed by how well-written it was. It reads like a story. Now who to root for: Laidre for her perseverance or the narwhal to maintain their fairytale mystery?
Posted by Julie on May 19,2009 | 05:09PM
Do You Think We Should Hunt Narwhals? i vote No GO NARWHALS!!!
Posted by on October 9,2009 | 03:52AM
Unicorn of the sea?
I disagree, they are more like the Jedi of the sea.
.... And inventors of the shish-kebab.
Posted by Krev Zabijak on October 25,2009 | 05:18PM