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A 17-year-old boy from Coral Harbour, Nunavut, is in stable condition being treated for hypothermia after he was rescued off an ice floe in the mouth of Hudson Bay on Monday. His uncle was also taken to hospital.
The teen and his uncle, Inuit elder Jimmy Nakoolak, were out on a weekend hunting trip when their snowmobile broke down on the way back to Coral Harbour, a community located on the southern coast of Southampton Island.
After Nakoolak departed on foot to get help, the ice cracked and the boy was stranded on an ice pan about 50 metres by 50 metres in size for about three days.
Nakoolak was found on Sunday, while military searchers located and rescued the boy off the ice floe on Monday morning.
Nunavut RCMP spokesman Jimmy Akavak told CBC News the both men were flown to a hospital in Churchill, Man., for treatment and observation. Both were reported to have hypothermia.
"Both are said to be stable, but the young man was very, very much hypothermic so they're taking precautions on how they treat him and how they handle him," Akavak said.
"So hopefully he'll do better."
Akavak said while the teen was stranded on the ice floe, he was forced to shoot a polar bear that came within 150 metres of him.
Both police and conservation officers in Coral Harbour have confirmed that the polar bear was killed in self-defence.
More than 40 search and rescue volunteers from Coral Harbour, a hamlet of about 800 people, worked with RCMP and military crews in the three-day search.
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A 17-year-old boy from Coral Harbour, Nunavut, is in stable condition being treated for hypothermia after he was rescued off an ice floe in the mouth of Hudson Bay on Monday. His uncle was also taken to hospital.
The teen and his uncle, Inuit elder Jimmy Nakoolak, were out on a weekend hunting trip when their snowmobile broke down on the way back to Coral Harbour, a community located on the southern coast of Southampton Island.
After Nakoolak departed on foot to get help, the ice cracked and the boy was stranded on an ice pan about 50 metres by 50 metres in size for about three days.
Nakoolak was found on Sunday, while military searchers located and rescued the boy off the ice floe on Monday morning.
Nunavut RCMP spokesman Jimmy Akavak told CBC News the both men were flown to a hospital in Churchill, Man., for treatment and observation. Both were reported to have hypothermia.
"Both are said to be stable, but the young man was very, very much hypothermic so they're taking precautions on how they treat him and how they handle him," Akavak said.
"So hopefully he'll do better."
Akavak said while the teen was stranded on the ice floe, he was forced to shoot a polar bear that came within 150 metres of him.
Both police and conservation officers in Coral Harbour have confirmed that the polar bear was killed in self-defence.
More than 40 search and rescue volunteers from Coral Harbour, a hamlet of about 800 people, worked with RCMP and military crews in the three-day search.
More on link