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The Inuit people live in the far northern areas of Alaska, Canada, Siberia, and Greenland. They originally made their home along the Alaskan coast, but migrated to other areas. Everything about the lives of the Inuit is influenced by the cold tundra climate in which they live. The Inuit were one of the last native groups to arrive in North America. They arrived sometime between 6000 BC and 2000 BC. The earliest Inuit spent part of the year wandering, and part of the year in a fairly permanent camp. Their year was divided into three hunting seasons. The Arctic People - Groups in this Region. The people of the Canadian Arctic are known as the Inuit. They used to be called Eskimos, which came from a Native American word for 'eater of raw meat'. The Inuit were the last native people to arrive in North America. History. During roughly 4,000 years of human history in the Arctic, the appearance of new people has brought continual cultural change. The ancestors of the present-day Inuit, who are culturally related to Inupiat (northern Alaska), Katladlit (Greenland) and Yuit (Siberia and western Alaska), arrived about 1050 CE. Many people believe incorrectly that Inuit live only in igloos. ... In fact, although most Inuit live in regular old houses now, igloos are still used for the occasional hunting trip. Inuit are "Aboriginal" or "First Peoples", but are not "First Nations", because "First Nations" are Indians. Inuit are not Indians. The term "Indigenous Peoples" is an all-encompassing term that includes the Aboriginal or First Peoples of Canada, and other countries.
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The Inuit are a group of people inhabiting the arctic regions like the Alaskan coast, or Canada then later migrating to other areas like Greenland. The Inuit learned to make homes out of snow and ice for the winter which they called an "igloo". Almost ninety percent of the Inuit in the Western Alaska region died from disease after they came into contact with Europeans in the 1800s.