the Pages of Shades - Inuit

VII. Housing, Transportation, and Clothing

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Igloos (Inuit iglu,"house") are of two kinds: walrus or sealskin tents for summer and huts or houses for winter.

Winter houses are usually made of stone, with a driftwood or whalebone frame, chinked and covered with moss or sod. The entrance is a long, narrow passage just high enough to admit a person crawling on hands and knees.

summer hunting (Wolfgang Kaehler-Encarta)

In the past, the Inuit were chiefly a nomadic people who hunted for sustenance and followed their game's seasonal movements. Although many Inuit now live in fixed settlements throughout the newly autonomous Canadian territory of Nunavut, some maintain their traditional hunting customs. Pictured here is an Inuit standing next to his summer igloo, a tent made of walrus or seal hides.

Wolfgang Kaehler

snow igloo (George Holton/Photo Researchers, Inc.-Encarta)

Some Inuit peoples of central and eastern Canada make igloos of snow as both short- and long-term winter homes. Inuit may live in igloos for months at a time, using soapstone lamps burning whale or seal fat for warmth. The word igloo comes from the Inuit term iglu, meaning "house."

George Holton/Photo Researchers, Inc.


During long journeys some Canadian Inuit build winter houses of snow blocks piled in a dome shape. Such snow houses, rare in Greenland and unknown in Alaska, were once permanent winter houses of the Inuit of central and eastern Canada.

In the 20th century many Inuit have moved into towns to live in government-built, Western housing.

Inuit kayak (ViewImages)

The principal traditional means of conveyance are the kayak, the umiak, and the dogsled. The light, seaworthy kayak is a canoelike hunting boat made of a wood frame completely covered with sealskin except for a round center opening, where the single occupant sits. In Greenland and Alaska the skin around the hole can be laced tightly around the occupant, making the kayak virtually watertight.

The umiak, a larger, open boat about 9 m (about 30 ft) long and 2.4 m (8 ft) wide, and made of a wooden frame covered with walrus skins, is used for whaling expeditions and, sometimes, to transport families and goods.

The sled, drawn by a team of native dogs admirably adapted for the purpose (see Eskimo Dog), is common among all Inuit except those in southern Greenland. When iron was obtained through trade, iron runners largely supplanted ivory and whalebone runners. In the last half-century motorboats and snowmobiles have become important modes of travel.

Traditional Inuit dress for both men and women consists of watertight boots, double-layer trousers, and the parka, a tight-fitting double-layer pullover jacket with a hood, all made of skins and furs. An enlarged hood forms a convenient cradle for nursing infants.

traditional dress (Ace Williams/Archive Photos-Encarta)

The Inuit ethnic groups in Greenland, North America, and the extreme northeast of Siberia depend on seals and walrus to provide both skins for clothing and meat for food. The skin and fur are fashioned into boots, pants, and jackets that protect them from cold temperatures and wet conditions. This Inuit woman was photographed in Alaska.

Ace Williams/Archive Photos


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"Inuit," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000 http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

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