Soldiers and researchers
come together for a pig
roast and game night.
Competitors try to put
a jousting lance through
a small ring while a
colleague pushes them
on a cargo bike. As
the night goes on, the
ring gets smaller, and
teams seek to distract
their opponents.
One person is playing the guitar, another is
reading. There’s a relaxed, vacation vibe despite
the location: 575 miles from the North Pole at
a Danish military outpost in northeastern
Greenland called Station Nord. The generator
hums in the distance, and occasionally the two
Greenland dogs begin to bark. The sun circles
the Arctic sky.
The day-to-day operations of this base are
mostly scientific. The Arctic is warming faster
than any other place on Earth, and for research-
ers studying the impact of climate change, the
base has the advantage of being remote—at
nearly 82 degrees north and inside the world’s
largest national park—and accessible, because
of its runway. It’s no exaggeration to say that
The summer evening
is warm enough for
the soldiers to sit outside
with their shirts off.
NORTH
AMERICA
A S I
A
E
U
R
O
P
E
ATLANTIC OCEAN
ARCTIC^
OCEAN
(KALAALLITNUNAAT)
(DENMARK)
C ANADA
ICELAND
DENMARK
U.S.
U.S
. RUSS
IA
NORWAY
NORTHEAST GREENLAND
N. P.
Station
Nord
Nuuk
(Godthåb)
North
Pole
ARCTI
C^ CIR
CLE
MAP: MATTHEW W. CHWASTYK, NGM STAFF