It was very cold and covered with snow. the temperatures can get to -50F degrees, they need furs to stay warm and not freeze to death. they lived in very harsh conditions.
Is it possible if you go back about 7,000 years, that the poles could possibly have been at different points allowing a much warmer climate? Which would also allow for the more balanced temperate they are finding that may have been in Africa?
cold
Cold, they usualy live in northern canada.
Their culture, and similar cultures, was based on an Arctic climate. That meant they would move south and north with the ice.
Their culture, and similar cultures, was based on an Arctic climate. That meant they would move south and north with the ice.
They lived in cold snowy places like canada,Greenland,russia, and Alaska.
Cold with almost half the year being in complete darkness or daylight.
12 thousand years ago was during the last ice age, known as the Younger Dryas period. The climate was colder than it is today, with large ice sheets covering much of North America and Europe. This period marked the transition from the ice age to the warmer climate of the Holocene epoch.
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.
The Inuit culture has experienced significant changes due to factors such as colonization, modernization, climate change, and globalization. Traditional practices like hunting and fishing have been impacted, language and art forms have evolved. There are efforts to preserve and revitalize Inuit traditions and values while adapting to contemporary challenges.
Is this it? "With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day." --from 2 Peter 3:8 (New International Version)
The Inuit are not Indians and the Inuit have many different languages. It's like asking someone what did Europeans speak?
Iglooes