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  2. Inuit culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_culture

    They displaced the related Dorset culture (from 500 BCE to between CE 1000 and 1500), called the Tuniit in Inuktitut, which was the last major Paleo-Eskimo culture. [23] The first Inuit group, known as Paleo-Eskimos, crossed the Bering Strait in 3000 BCE presumably on winter ice, which was long after earlier migrations by the ancestors to the ...

  3. Inuit art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_art

    Inuit sculptures had been produced prior to contact with the Western world. They were small-scale and made of ivory. In 1951, James Houston encouraged Inuit in Kinngait to produce stone carvings. [24] It was mostly men who took up carving. Oviloo Tunnillie was one of the few women to work in sculpture and to garner a national reputation. [25]

  4. 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.

  5. Inuit mother and daughter demonstrate what a real 'Eskimo ...

    www.aol.com/inuit-mother-daughter-demonstrate...

    We've been doing "Eskimo kisses" all wrong according to one Inuit mother-daughter pair. Inuit have resided in the arctic for 5,000 years. Due to colonialism, the Inuit population is only roughly ...

  6. Dorset culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorset_culture

    The Dorset was a Paleo-Eskimo culture, lasting from 500 BCE to between 1000 CE and 1500 CE, that followed the Pre-Dorset and preceded the Thule people (proto-Inuit) in the North American Arctic. The culture and people are named after Cape Dorset (now Kinngait) in Nunavut, Canada, where the first evidence of its existence was found. The culture ...

  7. Siberian Yupik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siberian_Yupik

    (in Russian) A radio interview with Russian scientists about Eskimos (in Russian) ICC Chukotka, the regional office of Inuit Circumpolar Council; Krauss, E. Michael (2005). "Eskimo languages in Asia, 1791 on, and the Wrangel Island-Point Hope connection". Études/Inuit/Studies. 29 (1– 2): 163– 185. doi: 10.7202/013938ar. Photographs

  8. Thule people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thule_people

    The Punuk culture was initially defined by Henry Collins in 1928 from a 16 ft (4.9 m) deep midden on one of the Punuk Islands. Later excavation on St Lawrence Island confirmed Jenness's ideas on the Bering Sea culture, and demonstrated a continual cultural sequence on the island from Old Bering Sea, to Punuk, to modern Eskimo culture. [5]

  9. Masks among Eskimo peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masks_among_Eskimo_peoples

    The term Eskimo has fallen out of favor in Canada and Greenland, where it is considered pejorative and the term Inuit has become more common. However, Eskimo is still considered acceptable among Alaska Natives of Yupik and Iñupiat (Inuit) heritage, as well as Siberian Yupik peoples, and is preferred over Inuit as a collective reference. [10 ...