Historically - Most of the time the Inuit lived in a frozen land where they fished and hunted, mainly seals, for food. To travel they used sleds pulled by teams of husky dogs. In the short summer, they walked and harvested wild berries etc., dried fish, and hunted land animals.
Alaska and Russia used to be connected. it made this huge land mass so the Inuit was able to get to North America. because of water level rising, that land piece is now underwater and what is now called the Bering strait or sea
they used kayaks, umiaks, and also dog sleds pulled by eskimo dogs and also used snow shoes to walk.
It depends from were, if you mean from Siberia to Alaska then the Inuit traveled by the Bering landbridge or boat, to hunt food, they were nomadic and followed caribou herds.
to mcdonalds
The Inuit People are a culture all their very own, although they are the very first really truly Canadian people along with the First Nation native people, their customs and language is truly unique and vastly different from any other culture.
Inuit
they usually travel in canoes
Both Inuit and Metis describe Aboriginal Canadians. The Metis have a mixed First Nations and European heritage, but are now considered distinct from First Nations and Inuit, but with equal recognition. The Inuit people are those not covered by either First Nations or Metis, but often mistakenly referred to as Eskimos which generally encompasses Inuit, Yupik and other circumpolar native peoples.
George Vancouver came into contact with Ojibwa and Inuit.
the first nation people are the first nations that were on earthFirst Nations is a term of enthicity that refers to the Aboriginal Peoples Of Canada who are neither Inuit nor Metis There are currently over 600 recognised First Nation Government and bands spread all across Canada, roughly half of which are in the provinces of Ontario and British Columbia.698,025 is the number of first nations people around in Canada
inuit is one of them
Inuit and other native americans
First Nations
The Inuit people have an oral tradition, not written. These oral traditions when first recorded noted that they have used totem poles since their creation (the creation of the Inuit People that is).
Canadians are not equal, some are "Canadian Plus". They have all the rights of Canadians PLUS extra rights due to archaic race treaties. But most Canadians do not agree with these race laws and benefits. That is where the term "First Nations" come from. Other terms have been used including Native and Indian. The problem with these terms is the obvious connection to race. The term "First Nation" has been adopted by those covered by race based treaties to avoid reminding people of the racial superiority claims. We know that those calling themselves First Nation were not "First Nations" just the surviving nations. The First Nations in Canada are lost to history many thousands of years ago but not in the case of the Inuit. The Inuit cannot claim "First Nation" we know the Dorset culture has the best claim to First Nation in the north but they were "displaced" by the Thule and then the Inuit. The Metis have a questionable First Nation claim because the treaties are race based and Metis have as little as one sixteenth of the needed blood. Today many Metis are Metis by culture, unable to prove their racial purity. First Nations people can prove their racial purity and have been numbered by the Canadian government. They alone can lay unquestionable claim to the rights given in the ancient race based treaties. Those rights and that special status is the common connection. Each have their own claims, some better than others but all of them want a piece of that special status and a piece of the multi-billion dollar industry that surrounds it.
Inuit and other native americans