First of all they are not Indians.
Only ignorant people say Inuit Indians.
Inuit and Indians have two completely different blood types.
And no, Inuit did not live in igloos, ever.
At one point in time, a very small percentage of Inuit in a remote part of northern Alaska used igloos like a person would use a tent when they go camping.
A shelter when you are far away from home and don't have the supplies and time to construct a permanent dwelling.
inuits don't just live in igloos. They live in houses made out of driftwood which are then covered with soil.
they live in igloos
Eskimos or inuits.
Ice, as they live in igloos.
Inuits do not live in igloos. They live in regular houses that were built by the government when they claimed Alaska as a state.
they built igloos to live in and went fishing alot
Eskimos live in igloos.A common misconception, taught from childhood is that all eskimos, or Inuits as they should be known as, live in igloos. This is not the case.I want my birthday cake to be covered in igloos and polar bears!
No one lives in igloos. They are temporary shelters that can be built for protection from extreme weather conditions in the arctic and antarctic regions. Building them takes considerable skill, and they can be large and comfortably warm .
These days, not many of them do, apart from maybe during hunting trips. Back when it was more common it was because compacted snow was a readily available building material.
Inuits can only eat meat cause nothing grows in the arctic. Inuits dont live in igloos they live in tents made out of animal skin, they only use igloos for emergency shelters and hunting shelters.
They were called igloos, but they don't make them often any more. They live in houses, just like in the rest of the world.
igloos