There never has been or is currently of today any native Americans found in that part of the world.
its easy,the inuit
The Inuit. They live mostly in the arctic regions of Canada, the U.S.A. (Alaska), and Russia.
The Inuit tribes of Alaska, Canada, and Greenland.
The Inuits
Nobody. The Grizzly bear is native to Northern Canada and Alaska
Native Alaskans ARE Native Americans. So are First Nations Canadians and Native people in Mexico. The borders did not exist 200 years ago. The Inuit related peoples stretch from Alaska across Canada to Greenland with some in Russia too. The Dene related people are in Alaska, Canada, in the Pacific areas of Oregon and northern California, and in Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico, Colorado, Texas and Oklahoma. They have many things in common.
They do live in Northern Canada, they are just non-native
The Inuit tribes of Canada, Greenland, and Alaska.
No, "eskimo" is not a proper noun. It is a common noun used to refer to a member of an indigenous people inhabiting the Arctic and subarctic regions of North America, Greenland, and eastern Siberia.
Yes, about 15.6% of Alaska's population is Native American.
They are Native Americans who live in British Columbia, Canada and Alaska.
About 44% of the land in Alaska is owned by Native American tribes and corporations as a result of settlement claims and other agreements.