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  2. Qarmaq - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qarmaq

    Qarmaq (plural: "qarmat") [1] is an Inuktitut term for a type of inter-seasonal, [2] single-room family dwelling used by Inuit. To the Central Inuit of Northern Canada , it refers to a hybrid of a tent and igloo , or tent and sod house .

  3. Inuit women - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_women

    Inuit parents showed a very high level of warmth and affection to their children. Inuit children usually began to contribute to the family and community by the age of 12 through activities like picking berries and hunting small game. During this period, they learned skills from their parents through close observation.

  4. Inuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit

    The Inuit Circumpolar Council is a United Nations-recognized non-governmental organization (NGO), which defines its constituency as Canada's Inuit and Inuvialuit, Greenland's Kalaallit Inuit, Alaska's Inupiat and Yup'ik, and Russia's Siberian Yupik, [178] despite the last two neither speaking an Inuit dialect [69] or considering themselves "Inuit".

  5. Inuksuk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuksuk

    An inuksuk at the Foxe Peninsula, Nunavut, Canada. An inuksuk (plural inuksuit) [1] or inukshuk [2] (from the Inuktitut: ᐃᓄᒃᓱᒃ, plural ᐃᓄᒃᓱᐃᑦ; alternatively inukhuk in Inuinnaqtun, [3] iñuksuk in Iñupiaq, inussuk in Greenlandic) is a type of stone landmark or cairn built by, and for the use of, Inuit, Iñupiat, Kalaallit, Yupik, and other peoples of the Arctic region of ...

  6. Mitiarjuk Nappaaluk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitiarjuk_Nappaaluk

    Mitiarjuk Attasie Nappaaluk was born in 1931 in Kangiqsujuaq, Nunavik. [1] Because she was the elder of two daughters – and had no brothers – she grew up learning both women's traditional work and skills more ordinarily taught to men, such as hunting caribou and seals.

  7. Qargi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qargi

    Qargi in the village of Stebbins, Alaska 1900 Semi-underground men's community house (Qargi) with bowhead whale bones, Tikiġaġmiut, Point Hope, Alaska, 1885. Qargi (Inupiaq:), Qasgi or Qasgiq (by the Yup'iks), Qaygiq (by the Cup'iks), Kashim (by the Russians), Kariyit, [1] a traditional large semi-subterranean men's community house' (or "communal men's house, men's house, ceremonial house ...

  8. Jean Briggs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Briggs

    [1] [2] She was a student of Cora Du Bois, an American cultural and psychiatric anthropologist. [2] In 1970, she published her best-known book, Never in Anger: Portrait of an Eskimo Family, based on research conducted while living with an Inuit family along the Chantrey Inlet for 18-months during the 1960s. [1]

  9. Culture of Greenland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Greenland

    Hunting has always been an important aspect of the Greenland Inuit culture: "The Inuit culture is the most pure hunting culture in existence. Having adapted to the extreme living conditions in the High Arctic of the North American continent for at least four thousand years, Inuit are not even hunter-gatherers. Inuit are hunters, pure and simple."