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Welcoming the Circumpolar North

As eight contingents look to make their mark at 2023 Games, we are thrilled to welcome them from across the circumpolar North.

Welcome (English) | Bienvenue (French) | Tansi (Cree) | Edlanete (Dene) | Bures boahtin (Sápmi) | Tikilluaritsi (Greenlandic) | ᑐᙵᓱᒋᑦᑎ (Inuktituk)

Alaska

Colours: Blue and gold

Number of participants: 285

Established in 1968 as a non-profit, Arctic Winter Games Team Alaska (AWGTA) cultivates and celebrates sport, social exchange and culture. Team Alaska strengthens Alaska’s communities by providing young athletes with the opportunity to compete in friendly competition while sharing cultural values from northern regions around the world.

Alaska will be hosting the 2024 Arctic Winter Games.

Alberta North

Colours: Royal blue and white

Number of participants: 341

Alberta North joined the Arctic Winter Games in 1986 and hosted for the first time in 1994 in Slave Lake.

The fourth largest of Canada’s provinces, Alberta is the southernmost participant in the Games. Participation is limited to those regions located north of the 55th parallel.

Greenland

Colours: Red and white

Number of participants: 67

Greenland has been participating in the Arctic Winter Games since 1990. In 2002, Greenland hosted the Games for the first time in Nuuk, and they last hosted the Games in 2016. Greenland is the most northerly of the jurisdictions involved in the Arctic Winter Games.

Considered part of North America, Greenland is the world’s largest island. Two-thirds of the island is located above the Arctic Circle and approximately 85 percent of its landmass is covered by ice.

Northwest Territories

Colours: Navy, sky blue and white

Number of participants: 349

The Northwest Territories (NWT) was the first team to host the Arctic Winter Games in 1970 in Yellowknife and last hosted the Games in 2018.

The Northwest Territories is the second largest of the three territories in Canada. The territory extends from the 60th parallel to the North Pole and includes several large islands in the Arctic Ocean.

Nunavik-Quebec

Colours: Lime green and black

Number of participants: 76

Nunavik-Quebec, also known as Arctic Quebec, participated in the Arctic Winter Games in 1972, 1974, 1976, and 1986. The Team returned to the Games in 2000 and has participated ever since.

Nunavik is the region of Quebec located above the 55th parallel. It is often included in the Arctic Winter Games because of the close cultural ties between its Inuit residents and those of Nunavut and Greenland.

Nunavut

Colours: Red, yellow and blue

Numbers of participants: 267

Prior to 2002, Nunavut participated in every Arctic Winter Games as part of Team NWT. Since that time, it has become a permanent member. Also noteworthy, 2002 was the first time Nunavut hosted the Games in Iqaluit, along with co-host Nuuk, Greenland.

Nunavut is Canada’s newest territory, created from the division of the Northwest Territories in 1999. Nunavut is an area characterized by vast tracts of Canadian Shield and tundra, as well as most of Canada’s Arctic Archipelago.

Sápmi

Colours: Red, yellow and blue

Number of participants: 51

Sápmi is the cultural region traditionally inhabited by the Sami people. The region stretches over the northern parts of Norway, Sweden, and Finland. The Sami speak as many as nine distinct dialects, with the most widely spoken language known as Northern Sami.

Yukon

Colours: Black, red and white

Number of participants: 349

Team Yukon has participated in every Games since its inception in 1970 with Whitehorse hosting the Games six times. The 2020 Games would have marked the seventh time hosting for the city when the pandemic struck and forced the Games to be cancelled.

Stretching from St. Elias Range, which forms the Yukon border with Alaska and British Columbia, Yukon extends to the Arctic Ocean and the Beaufort Sea. Included within this area is the famous Klondike, home of the last great Northern American gold rush in 1898.

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