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In the Arctic, the sunlight per day can vary anywhere from just a few hours to all day long, but it's important to have the major bricks in place before the sun is at its peak. Igloo-building is a serious process that can occupy one to several full days of strenuous effort.
As the outer layer of the igloo softens, you should use this time to smooth it and add semi-frozen material into the seams, like mortar. It should be as tightly packed as possible, without forcibly shifting the load-bearing elements of the igloo.
The slush-like 'mortar' will set and harden as the temperature drops, forming a smoother layer that is more melt-resistant than the original cut blocks. Its higher albedo will not only repel future sunlight, preserving your igloo's overall shape - but it also serves as a highly effective wind barrier, an important layer of protection from the elements which the structural blocks alone cannot fulfill.
A properly built igloo can achieve insulation ratings similar to that of commercially available home products. Water is an amazing substance!
Youtube to the rescue also...
How the Inuit build a Igloo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=An3uI5LNz_8
I sure know that my a$$ would feel it though.
You laugh, but there is theory to it.
"POV: The year is 19000 B.C. You are a proto-East Asian in Ice Age Siberia. The outdoor temperature is negative -80° C. However, unlike your igloo-mates, you do not have the ABCC11 rs17822931 gene mutation variant for no body odor. They are tired of your stinkiness and you are about to experience natural selection
#Arcticism"
https://x.com/arcticinstincts/status/1982480632522641620
Cause gas does nothing to ice.
And you gotta have high heat radiating from your ass to begin with if you seriously think a foul smelling stench that is produced from your insides is going to be strong enough to melt a building made of pure snow and ice meant to block cold winds from the outside and preserve heat inside with minimal heat loss.