James Smith Cree Nation students use indigenous knowledge, science in Nîpîy Project
A group of 10 high school students crowded a table in a conference room on the second floor of the Canadian Light Source Synchrotron. They excitedly punched in data about zinc levels in a specimen they brought from their home community, James Smith Cree Nation.
In June, the students finished up a long-running project that combines indigenous knowledge with engineering and science to find solutions to water issues on the First Nation. The project is called Nîpîy, the Cree word for water.
“The issues that we have at home is that on one of the main roads there was a big flood on one side of the reserve. So there is a big lake there now and I don’t think they can fix it because there are already fish there. Across the road… there was another lake,” Bernard Constant Community School student Taylor Brittain said.
Using the Canadian Light Source (CLS) synchrotron at the University of Saskatchewan (U of S), the students discovered what elements were inside the samples. The students were specifically looking for elements that wouldn’t naturally be in that environment, but may turn up because constant flooding has changed the landscape. Luckily, in these experiments no particularly toxic elements were found.


