Most Inuit (that's the preferred name now) now live in houses just like other north Americans. Hunting and camping out are still a major part of their culture and while doing this the build snow igloos in winter and seal or walrus skin summer hunting igloos. Many of them spend weeks at a time hunting and catching seal, walrus and polar bears.
The history of the Camp Fortune Ski Club is one that dates back to the day of the first igloo built by the Eskimos. The Camp Fortune Ski Club, however, is not located in Alaska, but on the outskirts of Washington where skiers has been vacationing since the first Eskimos.
Yes there are eskimos that live in Alaska.
Alaska
NO
About 42,000.
Eskimos
Eskimos and Inuits are not the same although in Alaska, the Inuit and Yupik people are generally referred to as Eskimos.
eskimos
Not state, territory in Canada called Nunavut (created in 1999 meaning "our land").
Fat.
There are some 20 native tribes and cultures in Alaska, mostly originating (long ago) from Asia. Most prominent are the Inupiaq, Yupik, Aleut, Eyak, Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian. In Alaska, describing them as "Eskimos" is politically correct. The Canadian and Greenland Eskimos usually insist on being called "Inuit".
No.Eskimos (Esquimaux) are peoples indigenous to the regions around the poles from eastern Siberia (of Russia), across Alaska (of the United States) and Canada, and all of Greenland (of Denmark).