Around seasonal migrations
no they dont. but in the spring and summer they hunt caribou!
The Inuit live too far north to hunt bison. They probably hunt caribou at times. However, seals, fish and whales are the main staples for the Inuit.
generally they hunted seals, whales, arctic foxes, walrus and other things
The vast majority of Canadians (make that ~98% of the population) have never tasted caribou meat in their lives, except those who hunt caribou for food, which consist of most of the northern native american tribes (Chipewayan and Inuit, primarily) and a few Caucasian hunters that come up to hunt in the tundra or live where they can intercept caribou migration routes to hunt for meat and sometimes a nice trophy.
In present day terms, usually with a rifle and a snow mobile.
No, the Inuit did not hunt woolly mammoths. The Inuit people are primarily associated with Arctic regions of North America and have a history that dates back thousands of years, but woolly mammoths went extinct around 4,000 years ago, long before the Inuit culture developed. The Inuit primarily hunted animals like seals, whales, and caribou that were present in their environment.
Caribou
The Inuit came from Russia following food. Caribou, Moose, ect.
The Inuit will eat fish, and deer and seal meat, also caribou if available
The men would huntwhale, walrus, birds and polar bears but they manly hunt caribou and seal and fish witch was very common.
You can hunt for caribou in western Canada and Alaska. These two areas have the highest caribou population than anywhere else in the world. Many people hunt caribou in these areas each year.
They fish and hunt.