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  2. Native American use of fire in ecosystems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_use_of...

    Fire regimes of United States plants. Savannas have regimes of a few years: blue, pink, and light green areas. When first encountered by Europeans, many ecosystems were the result of repeated fires every one to three years, resulting in the replacement of forests with grassland or savanna, or opening up the forest by removing undergrowth. [23]

  3. Control of fire by early humans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control_of_fire_by_early...

    [citation needed] Fire was used to clear out caves before living in them, helping to begin the use of shelter. [38] The many uses of fire may have led to specialized social roles, such as the separation of cooking from hunting. [39] The control of fire enabled important changes in human behavior, health, energy expenditure, and geographic ...

  4. Igloo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igloo

    An igloo (Inuit languages: iglu, [1] Inuktitut syllabics ᐃᒡᓗ (plural: igluit ᐃᒡᓗᐃᑦ)), also known as a snow house or snow hut, is a type of shelter built of suitable snow. Although igloos are often associated with all Inuit , they were traditionally used only by the people of Canada's Central Arctic and the Qaanaaq area of ...

  5. History of Greenland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Greenland

    There is evidence of Inuit goods at Norse sites, and Norse goods at Inuit sites. [41] According to Magnus Magnusson, relations between Inuit and Norse settlers were mostly positive and the two groups had a "deep friendship". [42] The Norse never learned the Inuit techniques of kayak navigation or ring seal hunting. Archaeological evidence ...

  6. Eskimo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eskimo

    Eskimo (/ ˈ ɛ s k ɪ m oʊ /) is an exonym that refers to two closely related Indigenous peoples: Inuit (including the Alaska Native Iñupiat, the Canadian Inuit, and the Greenlandic Inuit) and the Yupik (or Yuit) of eastern Siberia and Alaska.

  7. Inuit culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_culture

    The Inuit are an indigenous people of the Arctic and subarctic regions of North America (parts of Alaska, Canada, and Greenland).The ancestors of the present-day Inuit are culturally related to Iñupiat (northern Alaska), and Yupik (Siberia and western Alaska), [1] and the Aleut who live in the Aleutian Islands of Siberia and Alaska.

  8. Why did no one help her? Fatal subway burning exposes New ...

    www.aol.com/news/why-did-no-one-help-235827542.html

    Surely, someone would have thrown their coat over her, ran to look for water, screamed at her to stop, drop and roll. Found a fire extinguisher.

  9. Early Paleo-Eskimo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Paleo-Eskimo

    The Early Paleo-Eskimo tradition is known by a number of local, and sometimes spatially and temporally overlapping and related variants including the Independence I culture in the High Arctic and Greenland, Saqqaq culture in Greenland, Pre-Dorset in the High and Central Arctic and the Baffin/Ungava region and Groswater in Newfoundland and Labrador.