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  2. Seal hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seal_hunting

    The fur seal yields a valuable fur; the hair seal has no fur, but oil can be obtained from its fat and leather from its hide. [9] Seals have been used for their pelts, their flesh, and their fat, which was often used as lamp fuel, lubricants, cooking oil, a constituent of soap, the liquid base for red ochre paint, and for processing materials such as leather and jute.

  3. Maupuk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maupuk

    Maupuk is a seal hunting technique used by the Inuit (formerly known as Eskimo). They assign dogs to search for seal breathing holes and wait for the seals to emerge.

  4. Inuit culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_culture

    Therefore, hunting became the core of the culture and cultural history of the Inuit. They used harpoons and bows and arrows to take down animals of all sizes. Thus, the everyday life in modern Inuit settlements, established only some decades ago, still reflects the 5,000-year-long history of a hunting culture which allowed the Inuit and their ...

  5. Thule people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thule_people

    The Thule Tradition lasted from about 200 BC to 1600 AD around the Bering Strait, the Thule people being the prehistoric ancestors of the Inuit. [4] The Thule culture was mapped out by Therkel Mathiassen , following his participation as an archaeologist and cartographer of the Fifth Danish Expedition to Arctic America in 1921–1924.

  6. Toggling harpoon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toggling_harpoon

    Modern Inuit toggling harpoon head used for seal hunting. On the harpoon handle. Modern Inuit toggling harpoon head used for seal hunting. Off the harpoon handle. The toggling harpoon is an ancient weapon and tool used in whaling to impale a whale when thrown.

  7. Culture of Greenland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Greenland

    "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." (Henriette Rasmussen, Minister in Greenland Home Rule Government) [2 ...

  8. Most Greenlanders are Lutheran, 300 years after a ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/most-greenlanders-lutheran-300...

    Most Greenlanders are proudly Inuit, having survived and thrived in one of most remote and climatically inhospitable places on Earth. About 90% of the 57,000 Greenlanders identify as Inuit and the ...

  9. Bladder Festival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bladder_Festival

    The Bladder Festival or Bladder Feast (Nakaciuq "something done with bladders" or Nakaciuryaraq "the process of doing something with bladders" in Yup'ik), is an important annual seal hunting harvest renewal ceremony and celebration held each year to honor and appease the souls of seals taken in the hunt during the past season which occurred at the winter solstice by the Yup'ik of western and ...