An igloo is made of snow and ice. If you've seen people in the olden days (people in Antarctica mostly), they cut out ice from the floor and make an igloo. The snow acts like glue.
Materials used to build igloos are brick shaped ices which holds the igloo's balance.
Igloos have been made for hundreds of years and are still made today.
The people of the far north lived in igloos because these structures were better suited to their cold, harsh environment. Igloos, made from snow blocks, provided effective insulation and could retain heat from body warmth, while adobes, made from mud and clay, were ill-suited for the extreme cold and snow. Additionally, the availability of materials in the Arctic region made igloos a practical choice for shelter.
Igloos have minimal impact on the environment, as they are typically made from blocks of compacted snow. They are a sustainable form of housing, utilizing readily available materials without causing permanent damage to the environment. Igloos also provide efficient insulation, helping to reduce energy consumption for heating.
food, warmth, and materials for inside their igloos.
ice and snow
An igloo is a house made of ice and eskimos are the native people of Alaska (who were known to live in igloos)
They are made of frozen water...
They don't, Igloos can be made out of other materials. 'Iglu' is the Inuit word for a house or home built out of any material and is not restricted exclusively to snowhouses but includes traditional tents, sod houses, homes constructed of driftwood and modern buildings.
Igloos do not have a culture. It is a house made of ice blocks so it doesn't think, move, or have a culture.
inuits don't just live in igloos. They live in houses made out of driftwood which are then covered with soil.
The Inuit Tribes lived in IGLOOS.