Inuit tribes lived in Igloos
Inuit tribes lived in Igloos
Inuit tribes lived in Igloos
they live in igloos
Igloos
Igloos.
No, igloos can not be moved.
Igloos
Canadians DO NOT live in igloos. We live in houses
Hardly any Alaskan natives live in igloos. Most have regular houses. Igloos were useful because they could be readily made from items at hand (ice and snow) and lasted one or several seasons. Native Eskimos using ice and snow for housing is no more remarkable than the southwest Indians using clay or the northwest Indians using wood.
Penguins do not live in igloos. Eskimos, who live at the north polar regions, live in igloos. Penguins live in the southern polar regions. There are very few people, and no igloos, at the south pole.
a polo bear
Indians did not traditionally live in igloos; this is a common misconception. Igloos are primarily associated with the Inuit people of the Arctic regions, who built them from snow as temporary shelters. Indigenous groups in India typically lived in varied structures suited to their environments, such as mud huts, wooden homes, or semi-nomadic dwellings, depending on the region and climate. Each culture developed its own architectural styles based on available materials and environmental conditions.