What is it called when you go from place to place or wander?
There are several words
Nomadic - generally used with regard to groups of people who follow herds and are not 'settled' in a specific locality.
Peripathetic - generally used with regard to a single person, or type of person, who travels from place to place for work.
How did the Inuits build shelter?
in the winter they built igloos and summer the used animal skins to make tents
Why did the Inuit want their own territory?
because california was to cold and there feet were yellow with pink poka-dotts and since calafornia was to cold they moved to canada because it was colder there
Where are the Tlingit people native to?
The Tlingit people are native to the Pacific Northwest Coast of America. Right now the live mostly on Canadian territory and a small portion of Alaska.
SNOWSHOE foot and kayak
Answer:
Traditionally the Inuit were limited to dog sleds and foot during the winter months. During the summer, the option of boats (umiak and kayak) were available if there was open water. Recent technology has added the snowmobile as an individual option, helicopters and light planes for long distance travel and large trucks on ice roads for heavy transport. Heavy transport can also include sea going vessels for food and fuel during the summer.
What happened to the people of the inuit?
This question would come as a big surprise to the Inuit, who are doing quite nicely, thank you, and even have a Canadian territory of their own.
If, on the other hand, you are asking about the details of Inuit magical ceremonies, you are probably not going to get a reliable answer here.
There are no Yupik tribes, it's villages that have their own system.
What transportation do Inuit use today in modern times?
The Inuit tribe travel by foot, kayak, and dogsled.
There is no such language as Eskimo. Eskimo is a culture that speaks many languages of the Yupik, Inuit, and Aleut language families.
What did the white man call the Inuit?
The Inuit slang for white man is the same as the official word for white man in Inuktitut or ᐃᓄᒃᑎᑐᑦ, which is Kabluunak(there actually is no B in Inuktitut which indicates the word likely came from a different dialect of Inuktitut, likely from Inuvik) The roots of the word are Kabluu and Nak. Kabluu meaning eyebrows and Nak(ᓇᒃ) meaning stomach. Since early European travellers had large eyebrows and fat stomachs the name fit and stuck.
What type of government did the Inuit have?
Inuit society is organized not under government structures, but in kinship groups. (Groups of related families, that live as nomads.) Each group operates according to consensus; personal leadership not evident.
What do inuit eat in the winter?
fish, whale, and seal that's all i can remeber right now sorry if i dont have all.
Why did the Inuits settle where they did?
The Inuit are a group of culturally similar indigenous peoples inhabiting the Arctic regions of Greenland, Canada, and the United States. Inuit is a collective noun; the singular is "Inuk". The Inuit language is grouped under the Eskimo-Aleut family.
What do Inuit people where to keep them warm?
they wear what they have in the evironment. they use animal skins: seal. They also made fires from whale and seal blubber.
What is a Tlingit in touching spirit bear?
The Tlingit are an Indian tribe that lives at Circle Justice
Where dothe Inuits go to toilet?
Because it is so cold and there is no access to running water, a male urinates first on the head and then on the rest of the body of another person. This is where the term "Golden Shower" comes from.
What type of houses do the Tlingit live in?
Traditional Tlingit homes are made of wood, called "Plank Houses." Often they are adorned with Tlingit Art and/or include carvings, Totems, or other traditional markings. The Tlingit are an indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest Coast of North America.