they are very similar because they lived in the wild and ate off the lands the only differences is that the Algonquin lived to far up north to grow most food but the Iroquois could grow anything
The Inuit were traditionally hunters and fishers and gatherers. It is very difficult to do any farming in the far north where they live. The Kwakiutl did not farm for food but may have grown some tobacco and other Northwest coastal people did things to encourage the plants they wanted to grow. The Lakota grew corn but with the coming of the horse they farmed less and less. The Pueblo and Iroquois were agricultural people.
Not geographically, the Hopi are located in the American Southwest, New Mexico area, and the Iroquois are in the Northeast. However, there does seem to be a relationship between them. One belief is that the Iroquois originated in the southwest and migrated east and northward. There are some similarities between Iroquois cultures and the Hopi and I've heard elders refer to the Hopi as their relatives. Also it is not the 'Iroquois tribe.' Iroquois is mostly a language group divided between Northern Iroquois and Southern Iroqouis: Northern Iroquois consisting of the well known Haudenosaunee (Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, Tuscarora) among many other nations in Pennsylvania and Canada along Lake Ontario and the Southern Iroqouis consisting of the Cherokee and other nations.
the similarities is big and small
"What is the name of a Inuit snow house?" The Inuit word for an Inuit snow house is Igluvigak.
They were not a tribe. Inuit is a race of people. Some natural resources were fish, berries, and animal wildlife.
one of the similarities they have is that they both farm and hunt
iroquois human resource
dates for inuit
The Inuit were traditionally hunters and fishers and gatherers. It is very difficult to do any farming in the far north where they live. The Kwakiutl did not farm for food but may have grown some tobacco and other Northwest coastal people did things to encourage the plants they wanted to grow. The Lakota grew corn but with the coming of the horse they farmed less and less. The Pueblo and Iroquois were agricultural people.
some times the Inuit leaves there food under ground for flavor
yes they do and they are broken up in bands but some inuit grops like copper inuit does not have a chief
Gennesee is one of the names that Iroquois used.
Not geographically, the Hopi are located in the American Southwest, New Mexico area, and the Iroquois are in the Northeast. However, there does seem to be a relationship between them. One belief is that the Iroquois originated in the southwest and migrated east and northward. There are some similarities between Iroquois cultures and the Hopi and I've heard elders refer to the Hopi as their relatives. Also it is not the 'Iroquois tribe.' Iroquois is mostly a language group divided between Northern Iroquois and Southern Iroqouis: Northern Iroquois consisting of the well known Haudenosaunee (Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, Tuscarora) among many other nations in Pennsylvania and Canada along Lake Ontario and the Southern Iroqouis consisting of the Cherokee and other nations.
Inuit
cheese
cellabration
inuit is a race, not a religion, they can be or not be whatever they want.