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Inuit - Analysis | A Wisdom Archive on Inuit - Analysis |  | Inuit - Analysis A selection of articles related to Inuit - Analysis |  |
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Inuit, Inuit - Alaska, Inuit - Analysis, Inuit - Anthropological Analysis, Inuit - Canada, Inuit - Early history of the Inuit, Inuit - Eskimo, Inuit - Future prospects, Inuit - Greenland, Inuit - Inuit and First Nations, Inuit - Inuit since the arrival of Europeans, Inuit - Life and traditions of the Inuit people, Inuit - Modern Inuit culture, Inuit - Synopsis, Inuit - Traditional Inuit beliefs
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Inuit - Analysis |  |  |  | Inuit - Analysis: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - Inuit since the arrival of Europeans
Inuit - Canada.
The lives of Paleo-Eskimos of the far north were largely unaffected by the arrival of visiting Norsemen except for mutual trade (McGhee 1992:194). In the centuries to follow Inuit contact with explorers varied across the Arctic. Labrador Inuit have had the longest continuous contact with Europeans (Kleivan 1966:9). After the disappearance of the Norse colonies in Greenland, the Inuit had no contact with Europeans for at least a century. By the mid-16th century, Basque fishermen were already workin ...
See also:Inuit, Inuit - Inuit and First Nations, Inuit - Eskimo, Inuit - Anthropological Analysis, Inuit - Life and traditions of the Inuit people, Inuit - Traditional Inuit beliefs, Inuit - Synopsis, Inuit - Analysis, Inuit - Early history of the Inuit, Inuit - Inuit since the arrival of Europeans, Inuit - Canada, Inuit - Greenland, Inuit - Alaska, Inuit - Future prospects, Inuit - Modern Inuit culture Read more here: » Inuit: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - Inuit since the arrival of Europeans |
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 |  |  | Inuit - Analysis: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - Early history of the InuitThe Inuit are the descendents of what anthropologists call the Thule culture, a nomadic people who emerged from western Alaska around 1000 AD and spread eastwards across the Arctic, displacing the related Dorset culture (in Inuktitut, the Tuniit). Inuit legends speak of the Tuniit as "giants", people who were taller and stronger than the Inuit, but who were easily scared off and retreated from the advancing Inuit. Researchers believe that the Dorset culture lacked dogs, boats and other technologies that gave the expanding Inuit society a large advantage over them. By 1300, the Inuit had settled west Greenland, and finally m ...
See also:Inuit, Inuit - Inuit and First Nations, Inuit - Eskimo, Inuit - Anthropological Analysis, Inuit - Life and traditions of the Inuit people, Inuit - Traditional Inuit beliefs, Inuit - Synopsis, Inuit - Analysis, Inuit - Early history of the Inuit, Inuit - Inuit since the arrival of Europeans, Inuit - Canada, Inuit - Greenland, Inuit - Alaska, Inuit - Future prospects, Inuit - Modern Inuit culture Read more here: » Inuit: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - Early history of the Inuit |
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Inuit - Synopsis.
The Eskimo, or Inuit, people inhabit the land stretching from southeast Alaska to Greenland, an environment that heavily influenced a mythology filled with adventure tales of whale and walrus hunts. Long winter months of waiting for caribou herds or sitting near blowholes hunting fish and seals gave birth to stories of mysterious and sudden appearance of ghosts and fantastic creatures. The Inuit looked into the aurora borealis, or northern lights, to find images of their family and friend ...
See also:Inuit, Inuit - Inuit and First Nations, Inuit - Eskimo, Inuit - Anthropological Analysis, Inuit - Life and traditions of the Inuit people, Inuit - Traditional Inuit beliefs, Inuit - Synopsis, Inuit - Analysis, Inuit - Early history of the Inuit, Inuit - Inuit since the arrival of Europeans, Inuit - Canada, Inuit - Greenland, Inuit - Alaska, Inuit - Future prospects, Inuit - Modern Inuit culture Read more here: » Inuit: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - Traditional Inuit beliefs |
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 |  |  | Inuit - Analysis: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - Life and traditions of the Inuit peopleThe Inuit were traditionally hunters and fishermen, living off of Arctic animal life. They hunted by preference whales, walruses, caribou and seals, although polar bears, musk oxen, birds and any other edible animal might be turned to during lean years. The Arctic has very little edible vegetation, although Inuit did supplement their diet with seaweed.
Sea animals were hunted from single-passenger, covered seal-skin boats called qajait (singular qajaq) which were extraordinarily buoyant, and could easily be righted by a ...
See also:Inuit, Inuit - Inuit and First Nations, Inuit - Eskimo, Inuit - Anthropological Analysis, Inuit - Life and traditions of the Inuit people, Inuit - Traditional Inuit beliefs, Inuit - Synopsis, Inuit - Analysis, Inuit - Early history of the Inuit, Inuit - Inuit since the arrival of Europeans, Inuit - Canada, Inuit - Greenland, Inuit - Alaska, Inuit - Future prospects, Inuit - Modern Inuit culture Read more here: » Inuit: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - Life and traditions of the Inuit people |
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 |  |  | Inuit - Analysis: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - Anthropological AnalysisAnthropologists class the Inuit as members of the Mongoloid race, along with various Siberian tribes such as the Yakut, as well as the Chinese, Korean, and Japanese. Their physical appearance is closer to what is generally associated with Asian peoples than to other Native Americans, which are also members of the Mongoloid race.
Inuit have some specific characteristics which differentiate them from the the Mongoloid race: dolichocephalic heads, stout bodies or dark skin are some of the specific traits which allow anthr ...
See also:Inuit, Inuit - Inuit and First Nations, Inuit - Eskimo, Inuit - Anthropological Analysis, Inuit - Life and traditions of the Inuit people, Inuit - Traditional Inuit beliefs, Inuit - Synopsis, Inuit - Analysis, Inuit - Early history of the Inuit, Inuit - Inuit since the arrival of Europeans, Inuit - Canada, Inuit - Greenland, Inuit - Alaska, Inuit - Future prospects, Inuit - Modern Inuit culture Read more here: » Inuit: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - Anthropological Analysis |
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 |  |  | Inuit - Analysis: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - EskimoSee main article for more information on the term: Eskimo
In Inuktitut, the language of the Inuit people, "Inuit" means "the people". The English word "Eskimo" is a Native American word which is widely believed to mean "eater of raw meat" (although this meaning is disputed). Many Inuit consider the word Eskimo offensive, but it is still in general usage to refer to all Eskimo peoples, though it has fallen into disuse throughout Canada, where Canadians use the term Inuit. This is in part a result of the 1977 meetin ...
See also:Inuit, Inuit - Inuit and First Nations, Inuit - Eskimo, Inuit - Anthropological Analysis, Inuit - Life and traditions of the Inuit people, Inuit - Traditional Inuit beliefs, Inuit - Synopsis, Inuit - Analysis, Inuit - Early history of the Inuit, Inuit - Inuit since the arrival of Europeans, Inuit - Canada, Inuit - Greenland, Inuit - Alaska, Inuit - Future prospects, Inuit - Modern Inuit culture Read more here: » Inuit: Encyclopedia II - Inuit - Eskimo |
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