Inuit people live near the Arctic. Their homeland goes from the tip of Russia all the way to Alaska to the north part of Canada and little parts of Greenland. Inuit are also known as Eskimos, but they prefer Inuit. One Inuit is called Inuk.
Inuit spread east and as they do they discover new ways to survive the tough climate. The animals they hunted in the water are: fish, seals, whales, and walruses. On land the Inuit hunt polar bears, musk oxen, caribou, and other small animals. They make tents and clothes out of animal skin. They make tools out of animal bones, horns, and teeth. In the summer they travel in kayaks that are covered in animal skin. In the winter they use sleds pulled by dogs. Inuit live in tents in the summer and in the winter they live in sod houses. When they are hunting they build igloos.
Inuit are strong in spirit and mind. Inuit culture is based on nature; it is passed on by storytelling, family, drum dancing, culture laws, language, and tradition. As a young Inuk grows the learn how to do Arts and Crafts.
Most inuit lost their traditional way of life because we have moved up to there homeland in the Arctic region. Pollution has melted the ice which also makes the Inuit homeland smaller by second.
Yes, millions of people around the world live in cold deserts. Even Antarctica has a small contingent of scientists and and technicians living in various places on the coldest of all cold deserts.
no its too cold for any human to live there
Russia does have cold deserts.
Cold desert designation is based on average temperatures. Some cold deserts do get warm during the day but are still classified as cold deserts as the average temperature is much less than that of a hot desert.
Yes.
Yes, there are some deserts that are cool or cold the year round such as the Patagonian Desert and the Atacama Desert. There are other cold winter deserts tat are hot during the summer but can be bitterly cold in the winter. The Gobi Desert and the Great Basin Desert are examples.
no, It probably isn't. It would be far too cold for any sentient being to survive there.
Yes, coyotes live in the deserts and almost any other area of North America, including in towns and cities.Yes they do, they also live in forest's , and some mountain's.
The adaptable bobcat can be found in deserts, swamps, forests, even near towns.
Yes, there are plants in cold deserts. However, in Antarctica there is very limited plant life.
1. Why is it so hot during the day, then extremely cold at night? 2. What are some desert survival skills for humans? 3. What is the best way to open a cactus to drink the water inside? 4. What are the most common animals that live in deserts? 5. Is there any other plant life that can survive in a desert, other than cacti? Hope that helps :)
Europe does not have any deserts. It is too far north of the equator to have the level of heat to create deserts. There are hot and dry places, but no deserts.
Any desert except sand ones.