About 2 million people live north of the Arctic Circle. Most of them live in Russia (1.4 million) and Scandinavia (0.5 million), while less than 0.1 million live in North America and Greenland. The largest cities north of the Arctic Circle are situated in Russia: Murmansk, with 0.4 million people in its metropolitan area, and Norilsk with 0.2 million. The largest western city north of the Arctic Circle is Tromso, in Norway, with a population of more than 66,000. The largest city in North America is Barrow in Alaska, with more or less 4,000 inhabitants.
They are the Lapp people or Laplanders. They are Sami which is another name for Lapps.
In the area of lappland the Suomi people live
The Sami, who used to be known as the Lapps.
The "Samí" also called "Lapps"
Inuits are the people who live there, sometimes known as Eskimo's, although that name is seen as derogatory nowadays. also there are the Lapps or the Sami, as they are known
the inhabitant are the Inuits
The Scandinavian countries of Norway, Sweden, and Finland all reach above the Arctic Circle.
The land on the Arctic Circle is divided among eight countries: Norway, Sweden, Finland, Russia, the United States (Alaska), Canada, Denmark (Greenland), and Iceland (where it passes through the small offshore island of Grímsey).
Laplanders
Finland,Norway,Sweden,RussiaNorway, Sweden, Finland, Russia
The Scandinavian countries (Norway, Sweden and Finland) are each called The Land of the Midnight Sun. Technically the territory above the Arctic Circle and below the Antarctic Circle are the lands of the midnight sun but they aren't countries.
The Arctic Circle passes through Finland.
Norway, Sweden, Finland, Russia
Norway, Sweden, Finland
Norway, Sweden, Finland
Norway, Sweden, Finland
Norway, Sweden, Finland
Actually there are four countries in Europe that extend beyond the Arctic Circle, they are Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia.