Many. In our far north we know of at least three groups the earliest were the Dorset people. We think they lived up there since very shortly after the ice retreated from the last ice age, which means thousands of years.
They were then replaced by the Thule. Now when we say "replaced" or "displaced" what we really mean is likely a genocidal war. Which sounds terrible today but was par for the course in all areas of the world.
The Thule were replaced by today's Inuit.
The Indian group that lived in the far north was the Inuit tribe. They are sometimes referred to as Eskimos.
They called them kadeem's
The Navajo Indians arrived in the Four Corners Region of the southwestern US in about 1,000 AD. They came from the Far North/Subarctic areas of North America, from eastern Alaska and northwestern Canada.
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8,000
The Indian group that lived in the far north was the Inuit tribe. They are sometimes referred to as Eskimos.
Apache
the answer is Apache
Aleut
There were two Indian groups who lived in the far north. These were the Inuit and the Inuvialuit. Both tribes were the descendants of the Thule tribe.
The Inuit and Yupik people live in the far north of North America.
Far north region is also called extreme north region. Around fifty different ethnic groups live in the region, including the Shuwa Arabs, Fulani, and Kapsiki.
they were the peoples of the far north. They lived on islands off Alaska.
zuni kutchin bella huron
No. It lived only in North America, as far as we know.
Hinduism is the by far the dominant religious group. Hindus constitute more than 80% of the Indian population.
They called them kadeem's