It depends on where the Inuit lives, not all inuit live in the north so the answer above would be correct. There are certainly no Macdonalds available outside urban areas of the North. Most supplies are flown in or trucked in over ice roads in the remote areas so the Inuit who live in the small villages and settlements have regional staple foods unlike what we are used to in the south. Hunting, gathering and some very limited farming is carried out. Store bought food is very expensive and "country food" is often preferred. Seal, caribou, fish and small game is common.
First Nation and Inuit peoples used many different strategies: hunting, gathering wild plants, farming, and trading food between tribes. One thing was for certain; nothing was ever wasted, especially the animals.
Meat(such as deer)
Corn
White Rice
no they dont
No!
fish and seals
some are and hunting partys will
If there were Inuits working at one of the laboratories in Antarctica, they would eat what the rest of the research team would eat. There are few examples of canned or freeze-dried delicacies. See link
They eat food they get of big Daddy. Other word they eat s#!t.
People don't "eat for a living" otherwise they would be awfully fat.
They eat food they get of big Daddy. Other word they eat s#!t.
they do the same things you do in yours. cook, eat, sleep, etc
Antactica is on the bottom of the globe...The Inuit are around the top...
marriages are different in almost all cultures, like some cultures you have to dress a certain way, eat certain things, but the Inuits do not have wedding ceremonies
Japan, Norway, Denmark (Faroe Islands), Iceland and Canada (Inuits).