Da Boot the yaghan definitely were strong af, they survived at cold temperatures being naked. But don’t forget the Southern Hemisphere isn’t as cold as the Northern Hemisphere (excluding the Antarctic on where nobody lives). Tierra del Fuego is cold but cold like Iceland, with temperatures moderated by the ocean, not cold like Canada or Siberia.
Filipinos went to Alaska for work. Why they chose Alaska over Hawaii or California is beyond me. As a Filipino-American in San Diego, I can't fathom living in a place with such a radically different climate. Hats off to my brothers and sisters up there.
During the middle to late 20th century, Alaska was becoming a major port (because USSR closes her airspace for most US planes) and oil-producer. And it's in the Pacific.
Thats true I’ve been to Alaska and was surprised that out of every US state I’ve been to the most Filipinos were in Alaska. I’m from Alberta Canada theres also a high Filipino population here
The winter in south alaska/anchorage. Is not that cold. Its very similar to chicago/detroit/boston/vermount/upstate new york weather Because there is a warm pacific wind that warm the south part during winter. Its the same reaso. why vancouver isnt cold enough to get snow despite its further north then toronto montreal boston chicago detroit. Its because of that pacific warm winds The mountains area. And the northern part are very polar cold tho
I am from Philippines and my DNA result said I am 6% Eskimo/Inuit. That means my great great grandparent is full eskimo. That's why I'm watching this video to learn about them. My family used to kiss with their noses too.
I have an Inuit friend from Iqaluit, Nunavut. He stands over 6' tall. One day, I jokingly said that as tall as he was, there was probably a Viking in the woodpile. He laughed and said, probably, that his mother's people came from Thule.
I used to teach high school in Tuktoyaktuk. My preconceived notion of Inuit people being short and squat evaporated on the first day of class. Some of the boys were around 6'6", and some of the girls were close to 6'. They had surnames like Steen and Gruben, and the area had been a Norwegian whaling station since the late 19th century.
I was born and raised in South Georgia, USA - thousands of miles from the Inuit. Yet, upon taking a DNA test to determine my ancestry, I found my mitochondrial DNA was traced back to a woman living on the land bridge between Russia and Alaska during the last Ice Age. She lived 13,500 years ago. Those having this particular mitochondrial haplogroup were, and are - predominately Inuit. Blew me away.
Honestly, I know my family came from Europe, immigrated to Cuba, and most likely have some African blood cause of the Slave Trade, and when I did My Heritage DNA test, I got Europe, Nigeria, and what was weird was I got 1.5% Inuit. Like... damn. I've been trying to figure out how that's possible, as Spaniards never went so far north and Africans weren't enslaved so far north so I'm just so confused... maybe during the Viking Age as I do have some Irish and Scottish blood, so perhaps I had some ancestors who went to Greenland and then Northern Canada?
If your maternal haplogroup is A2, B2,C, D or even X2 than your maternal line is Native American. Mine is A2. My mother is from Central America. No matter if your ancestors are from North central or South America these maternal haplogroups come from the original peoples that populated the entire American continent.
The levels of plastic, heavy metals, and industrial pollutants winding up in the ocean is a shame (in every way, but especially in the context of the Inuit). Inuit are basically apex predators, so all those pollutants that build up as the food chain goes upwards wind up in them. I'm not sure how accurate this is, but I've read articles that state that levels of heavy metals are so high in some samples of Inuit breast milk (for example), that the breast milk could itself be classified as hazardous waste.
@Sho Tohara Why, I would move down a little...Why live a life of such hardships, and extreme conditions...I get it 500yrs ago, they had no choice, but in modern times they can move and live far better lives...
That's not true. We have less blood vessel just below the skin compared to other groups. In extreme weathers, the lack of the blood vessels make it easier to tolerate it. I can't stand the warm European winters, it's far too cold.
Lemou Kalista but we are talking about the Inuit. My wife is an outpost nurse, we see kids going in the water with just shorts.......id freeze my boys off if I went in...
Many Inuit have a belief system that incorporates animism, where natural elements and animals are acknowledged as having spirits. This worldview shapes their relationship with nature, emphasizing respect and balance.
I think the the Arctic is incredible; as a Canadian I feel very lucky to have such a place in our country, and I'm proud to have such a people as the Inuit as my fellow citizens.
I worked in the Arctic Circle for 4 weeks doing construction at a mine. Lots of Inuit working at the camp. They were very friendly. By far my favourite place I’ve had to work at, even if it got down to -60 degrees Celsius.
Crazy Joe ??? Eskimos, death rate 43.5 years. Clogs your arteries, eating meat et cetera th-cam.com/video/6N7Sk1ZRohU/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/9twFI210maw/w-d-xo.html . Rotting flesh, sit inside your stomach, for 5 days 🧟♂️🦠💩🐷.... Actual video ! Flies, maggots 🤮. Inside your guts, rotting meat. Meat has NO fibre, 0% !! Deodorant mask your symptoms, but you still smell like a corpse !! Scientific fact !! 7 minutes !! Please watch this ! It’s incredible !!! th-cam.com/video/jTttCfZsId8/w-d-xo.html Fish have Mercury 🎣☠️. One fish 🐟, 5 by catches 🔴🐠🦑🐡🦐🦞 throw overboard 😈, so you can have fish !!! 2.7 Trillion animals !!!!!! 5 minutes... 😈 th-cam.com/video/wHUiiz03LL4/w-d-xo.html . Go plant-based, please !!! 100% poop, that’s right, Turds, Faecal matter🧟♂️👄🦠💩🍔🥓🍗🍣🔴🐮⛓🤮 in your mouth💩(actual pictures). Science rules. That’s the science. 10 minutes, please watch everything. Why don’t you stop 👄💩🦠🍔 dirty poo boy !!! You’re absolutely disgusting !!! “Everyone is doing it. Follow the leader, it’s a Cult👄💩🦠🍔👄💩🦠🍔..........“ No poo, if you have vegan burgers ✅🍔, vegan tacos, vegan curry... on TH-cam, Low price, no murder.. COVID-19 is meat and fish and chicken.... et cetera Spanish flu, 1918s, 100 Million died, from pigs 🐷💩🦠🍖😵. Coronavirus, From Bats, et cetera 🦇💩🦠🍖😵. Bird Flu, From Chickens 🐔💩🦠🍗🐣😵. Swine Flu From Pigs 🐖💩🦠🍖😵. Mad Cows Disease, From Cows 🐄💨💩🦠🤪🥩😵. SARS, From Bats 🦇💩🦠🍖😵. 👆Hint hint 🐷🦇🐒🐮🐔🐣🐟.... 💩🦠🍖😵!!!!! Stupid does, what stupid do 🧟♂️🦠💩🍖,🧟♂️🦠💩🍖....👈are you stupid ???. Stabbing animals to death🧟♂️🦠💩🍔🔴🐮⛓🔫😈🔪. Don’t do it with your cute little dog 🐶, or a parakeet 🤗🦜, or piggies 🐷, oh wait, murder them, bludgeoned to death !!! Like Hitler and Stalin 🔴.... . Murder is murder. Killing is killing. Holocaust is Holocaust, no matter WHAT !!!! I don’t stab animals, I’m vegan ✅❤️😬🦷💪. Five years vegan, gaining muscle on a plant-based diet. Like a gorilla 🦍✅❤️😬🦷💪. Try it. Cheap, really good, muscle ✅💪. Delicious vegan food, from TH-cam. For vegan curry, or vegan tacos 🌮, or vegan oats ✅😋🌾🍏🍊🍓🥝........ 80,000 plant foods that’s edible...... Try it now, or you’re just a coward, and a hypocrite 🧟♂️🦠💩🔴🐷⛓🔨😈🔪 🚜🌾🌾🌾🚛🏪🛒🚶🏼♂️🥣😋✅🌎👍 🚜🌾🌾🌾🐄💨💩🏯😈🔪⛓🐮🔴💩🍖🚛🏪🚗💨🍖🧟♂️🤯💀💀💀...
It is probably because their ancestors were forced to live through the last ice age and some of them never left. So they had thousands of years of experience to back them up
3:16 "Imagine having to trek past thousands of miles of snow, ice, rock, and freezing oceans, only to make your home of snow, ice, rock, and freezing oceans." I loled at this 😂 Truly a fascinating group of people showing the testament of human resilience.
hahaha,,,,,but maybe they just assumed that the entire planet was like this so why go any further????,,,,,,,,,they never saw anything else,,,,,,,,,once you are born somewhere its in your blood and don't want to go anywhere else,,,,,,,,,
Despite having a diet high in fats, studies have shown that traditional Inuit communities have lower rates of heart disease. This phenomenon is often attributed to their active lifestyle and the benefits of omega-3 fatty acids from marine animals.
The kayak, originally crafted from seal skin and frame made of driftwood or bone, was an essential hunting tool. Its design allows for nimble movement in icy waters and demonstrates impressive engineering adapted to the environment.
Inuit diets are traditionally high in animal fat and protein, which is essential for survival in the cold climate. Foods like raw seal and fish are part of their nutrition, and this practice can be shocking to those unfamiliar with it.
@@nomad155 World Eskimo Indian Olympics (aka WEIO) every year..held in Alaska. However this year it is a no Olympic games...year....check out some of the videos...
My biological mother was Inuit and a little bit danish. My father was German French English Scottish and a bit of Welsh. I was born in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut. So I’m a pretty unique looking person being about half Inuit :) I’m 25 now and 5 foot 9 inches tall and never been more than 133 pounds in my life. I have an extremely fast metabolism and a very lean body. I love my lineage ❤️ Quaana means thank you :)
Freyja Frigg there will be always be differences even if we all mixed tomorrow, just because of the physical distances between us. Stop fearing “homogeneity pushes by the globalists” because it’s realistically impossible. Even if we develop trains that get you across the world in 5 minutes, and we all mixed, it can’t ever be homogenized and stay that way.
I'm sure others have commented, but North American Inuit (Or Alaskan natives as they are called in the US) find the term Eskimo offensive. It is actually a native american (Algonquin) word not a colonial pejorative. However, Eskimo is the scientific word used by linguists to describe the larger people who inhabit the north and share a common language (This excludes the Sami of Lapland). Although often ignored by the Inuit, the Yupik people of Siberia share a common linguistic root and that larger people, made up of two distinct cultures (Inuit and Yupik) are Eskimos.
No not all Alaska Natives belong to the Inuit, Yupik, Aleut. Glad you mentioned the Yupik too. The very colorful picture of Natives with Raven and other Clan symbols are Tlingit people.
I love all the inventions they made to adapt to their environment, like waterproof gutskin parkas, snow goggles made from slits in carved bones, towns made from whale and walrus bone, and of course, igloos!
@@MrCmon113 of course, I wasn't being wholly serious. However, I'm willing to bet if you could train an Inuit to be a scientist astronaut they would be excellent due to their toughness and thinking ability. Besides physical attributes it surely takes intelligence to thrive in that environment they live in.
Fostering positive relationships with Inuit communities can enhance national unity and social cohesion. Building partnerships based on respect and mutual understanding can lead to better governance and shared decision-making.
@@hermeticxhaote4723 You are looking at only their current environment. The truth is, all Neo Mongoloids and Caucasoids descend from peoples who made it through the last glacial maximum in harsh conditions, and intelligence was evolved in these groups already, which was preserved after the end of ice age
Hey! That's me! I'm one of those! Hi, I'm an aleut and boy are my arms tired! No, but really, I am from the Aleut confederation; it's pretty rare and hard to find other people [let alone full modern videos] that delve into the complex and OLD Inuit histories. Most of my best sources are old russian anthropologists, and obviously the people around me but that's rather one sided. It might be interesting if you were to do a video on the old Inuit tribes "science" and type of social progress; for example most Inuit tribes had a developed knowledge of the spherical shape of the earth, very advanced navigation, calendars and season charts, and my own tribe had an advanced knowledge of evolution as observed [and ironically criticised] by an early 18th century russian. I'd love to know what my cousins from greenland were up to, it's so hard to ask them as they speak Dutch or something
Hi there- I live in 5:29 my husband is Aleut. Relative to other native groups, Aleuts are fairly rare, but there still are many folks alive and well in Alaska and on the west coast and through Wisconsin and Montana. There are about 20 different Aleut/Unangan tribal organizations and/or corporations by which you can use to connect with your peoples. Just search the internet- they are extremely accessible.
Eskimo has come to be seen as a pejorative term in Canada and Greenland and has been replaced by Inuit in both those countries, whereas in Alaska (and in the United States in general), Eskimo is still a common term.
It kinda sucks since there's no replacement. The definiton of Eskimo is Inuits and Yupiks who both descended from one people and speak similar languages. And Yupiks don't want to be called Inuit. It's not inclusive for them. Although the Aleuts also descended from the same people but linguistically they've diverged way more. So maybe I have some ideas : either you say that they're "Eskimoan speakers" to Inuits and Yupiks and "Eskaliut speakers" to Inuits, Yupiks and Aleuts (those words are kinda necessary for talking about specific history... When I hear something about the "Inuits" I can never know if it includes the Yupiks or not). Or maybe replace Eskimo with "Greater Inuit people" and Inuit with "Lesser Inuit people"
Especially since they're not only closely related people, they're technically even their own ethnicity or "race" different from ALL other indigenous people of the americas, since they arrived way later. BTW I've found an actually viable replacement : indigenous people of the American Arctic. But it seems not that much convinient.
Really? Interesting. In Poland it's not pejorative at all. Same as "murzyn" for black ppl. On the other hand term "Cyganie" (gypsies) were pejorative and it was replaced with "Romowie".
Very interesting ethnicity study of the Inuit people and population of the arctic. I always find it fascinating how certain peoples have evolved to survive off a specific diet and way of life.
Inuit storytelling often blends myth and reality, passing down legends and lessons through generations. These stories frequently involve animals and the environment, reflecting their worldview and values.
I am Puertorican and recently found out that besides having Mesoamerican dna i also have 1% inuit dna in my...am so fascinated and exited about this, the fact that a have a tiny part of this beautiful tribe in me means the world to me.
(not so) Fun fact - the Inuits of Alaska had a very hostile relationship with the Chukchi, often engaging in attacks against each other. The last Chukchi-Inuit battle took place in 1947.
Even better fact: Japan occupied a number of islands of Alaska during WWII, and the USA asked the Natives of Alaska to join the Alaska Territorial Guards to help combat the Japanese. Men, women and children were allowed to join, and they helped the US Army and other military forces in so many ways.
@@jgxrt988 The Chukchis were very warlike in the past and engaged fights with all their neighbours. They are also the only nation the Russians couldn't beat in order to make them join the Russian empire, but soon they voluntarily joined anyway. Pretty interesting nation if you ask me.
@@Linduine Yeah, they used to be tough motherf@ckers. Unfortunately became victims of alcoholism in Soviet times, and turned into objects of jokes (kinda like Irish in British jokes).
This traditional form of music involves two women producing vocal sounds that mimic the sounds of nature and can be quite complex. It is often performed as a friendly competition and is an important part of cultural expression.
I find inuits also intresting because of their connections to siberia, its also theorized they are related to some siberian people (uralo-siberian language theory)
Traditional Inuit subsistence relies heavily on hunting marine mammals, such as seals, whales, and walrus. This practice is deeply embedded in their culture and survival techniques in the harsh Arctic environment.
Hey Masaman, would you like the Idea of making ethnic maps of historical regions?? Like maybe do a Map of the eastern coast of the US with the Native tribes in it or one of Pre-Achaemenid Iran with the Medes, Sargartians, Marangians, Parthians, Persians, Zarangi, Carmanians, Utii, etc.
Possible future names of Denmark (a country with a majority Turkish people and a Inuit minority in the future) ´´Danimarkalılar Ülkesi VE Far'dan Gelenler´´ ´´Danimarka ve birkaç inuit´´ ´´Eskimo(Eskimolar) ülkesi´´ ´´Danimarkalilar ülkesi ve eskimolar´´
There have been numerous efforts to map out pre-Colombian America, but they can never be fully accurate because of the lack of records and the purposeful destruction of existing records by European settlers. Still, you may want to check this out: native-land.ca/
While often associated solely with the Inuit, igloos were just one of many types of dwellings in the Arctic. They are ingeniously designed from compacted snow, providing effective insulation against extreme cold.
Great video! I'd love to learn more about the indigenous peoples of the Rocky Mountains in North America and their adaptations to the extremes of that environment. Thank you for your excellent research as always :)
Masan I’ve got a theory that I was hoping you could possibly look in to. I was a researcher at the California Academy of Sciences a year ago and I met some brilliant people working there. One of which was an anthropologist. He explained to me that the ancestors of Native Americans(excluding the Inuits) must have began their trek in the world starting in South America, sailing from Oceania. He said that the anthropological evidence makes it clear. Some of the oldest evidence of humans in the Americas were found in South America. He also explained that by examining the relative genetic diversity within gene pools across the continent, he deduced that the northern populations must have bottlenecked from the southern. He also pointed out that Native American populations share a genetic commonality with southeast Asian and Oceanian populations, particularly in the y-chromosome. There is even evidence that the Native America languages may have been influenced by Oceania. Indigenous South American languages pronounce “sweet potato” the same way as some Polynesian languages. Sweet potatoes grew in South America before Columbus. This plant is not native to the continent of South America, they come from Polynesia. Carbon dating shows they have grown in the America’s since at least 1000 AD. The westerlies blow from Oceania to South America. This could have been the current that carried humans to the new continent. I was hoping you could examine what the genetic evidence says about this theory.
Native American are indeed southeast asian origin. Go to southwest China& Vietnam villages , you can find some people have same custom as NA.Y chromesome of NA (haplogroup Q ,haplogroup C) have southeast asian origin. btw i visited some southwest china rural areas and find some blond & red hair people there. I believe they are ancestor of Germanic people.
Yes! this would be a very interesting topic! I think the evidence you are talking about is the Monteverde site in south Chile, my country. But as far as I know, there is an older (currently the oldest) site found in North America. But, it always puzzled me the existence of the Mapuche Chicken (something similar to the sweet potato case you mention). The Mapuche, the major indigenous group in these latitudes of Chile and Argentina, bred a variety of chicken native to America (I call the Americas just America hehe) that has no tail bone and lays blue eggs. Once I read in a newspaper that apparently these chicken are relatated to polinesian chicken, suggesting contact or ancestry of South American indigenous groups with Polinesians. Also, the Mapuche language or Mapuzugun is still not classified in any language family, no one is certain about its origin.
@@FranKoPepez I mean it wouldnt be crazy to think that the polinesians went to S. America. Was'nt it them who built the statues on Easter islands? The Viking's sailed from Scandinavia to North america, so to sail from easter island at that time would be very possible. But in Scandinavia we also have these "native" looking tribes, called Samí. And our Samí people share alot of dna to the counter parts in North America, so they did atleast cross the landbridge at some point, either from NA to Europe, or the other way around. www.google.com/search?q=old+sami+people&tbm=isch&hl=sv&nfpr=1&hl=sv&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjo0IKVgZHrAhVXyioKHfySBysQBXoECAEQKQ&biw=1903&bih=1007#imgrc=O7Zo5VsbO0IyCM&imgdii=0e2AqdMUjs4NnM
The sweet potato was in southeast asia before it was in polynesian. I mean we all know polynesian derive from the Island southeast asias, no secret anymore. According to the anthropological Centers of the universities of Harvard, Stanford, Oxford and Canberra Austronesian people (Island South East Asians, Polynesians, Micronesians, Madagascar and many Amazonian Tribes) have the haplogroup O1a + O2a + the haplogroup e (one of the oldest haplogroups in the world only found in austronesian people). The first austronesian culture was the Hemudu Culture (6000 BCE) then the Liangzhu Culture (4500 BCE) on the coastal areas of china (not related to ethnic chinese or han chinese people but way older people who isolated themselves). These tribes travelled downward to Taiwan and settled there (Taiwanese Aboriginies), travelled further downward to the Philippines, Malaysia (Borneo), Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and from there into all the different Islands of the south pacific as far as the easter islands. Polynesians on the other Hand are up to 79% of austronesian descent and only up to 21% of melanesian descent.
I'm originally from the Philippines🇵🇭 and surprisingly found in my DNA test about my Inuit ancestry and European ancestry. Am I bit shocked 😲 but at the same time proud of my ancestors 😊❤️
The term “Eskimo” is actually a really offensive term to the native people of the north. I am indigenous of Canada with multiple ties with the Inuit people. Good content though.
Amazing content. As a member of inuit from Greenland, I find your video educating. Since, us in Greenland have learned much more about European/danish history rather than our own.
It would be cool to hear about others who live in extreme environments. Maybe those of southern pacific islands, like tasmania or easter island if you haven't already done those
Extreme? Rapa Nui maybe for its small land area and large population at one point, but Tasmania must be one of the most temperate and benign environments on earth, surely!
Maybe Easter Island because of its isolation... polinesians who made it there never came back, and polinesians were ocean travelers. But, the island wasn't the harshest, it has a subtropical climate, what (probably) happened there is that the island resources were overexploited, although there are still controversies.
Lance Powers, your idea of extreme is mixed up. Extreme is related to harsh temp and pressured environments like the Arctic's ,deserts, volcanoes, mountains (like Everest with thin air), and even in outer space.
1) Filipinos work in the fisheries, 2) Filipino American G I s stationed in Alaska stayed and settled 3) Filipino women moved with GI husbands to Alaska and settled, 4) Filipino women married civilian Alaskan men and settled in Alaska
As a Finnish-lsraeli-American, who was born and raised in Finland, l have always been fascinated by the Eskimos and lnuit of even further north. Their interactions with the Norse, who called both the lnuit and the lndians "skraelingar" ("weaklings"), in what would become Canada, are also of major interest. Another far-northerly group that l am fascinated with are the Saami (Sami, "Lapps") of Finland, Sweden, Norway and Russia, who are actually several peoples with interrelated, although not quite mutually intelligible, languages.
I believe the Inuit loved living in the northern region because of the ability to live in peace and quiet as it was uninhabited and they learn to live off the land to keep their distance
The Inuit look really similar to Tibetans (Esp. Northern Tibetans) !! Similar culture, way of living and clothing. But the connection is probably due to our ancestors from Siberia! Anyways this is a great video (just subscribed) you should make a video about Tibet :)
I found a picture of my grandmother on the internet while looking through French pictures along side the photographers pictures of Tibetans, comparing the similarities between us.
My daughter a Newfoundland islander, has lived and taught school in Makkovik, Labrador in Nunatsiovit. I myself have done work along the north coast in that region, and have made many great Inuit friends. It is a land that is not for the weak at heart.
Hey Mason great job always. I've been wanting to learn more about the Thule people and their relationships with the Dorset, Inuit, and southerly tribes.
Inuit communities have traditional knowledge that is invaluable for understanding and managing the Arctic environment. Supporting them in environmental stewardship can lead to better conservation practices and responses to climate change.
Inuit people are very different from the Amerindian peoples of the Americas in custom, looks, language, temperament, etc. They are more related to the Asiatic people in eastern Siberia.
@@enkhzayazundui1063 They only share 50% of the DNA with Mongolians and Siberians. The other 50% is Amerindian. However, the cultures of the different Inuit groups are closer to Mongolians and Siberians than Amerindians. Amerindians think and do things very differently from Inuits and eastern Asiatic peoples.
@@rickgrimes5441 50% ? That is too high, I think. All those 1000s years they must have mixed with locals and others. But still we share Siberian DNA with today's inuits. I hope. 🤞
@@enkhzayazundui1063 It's been shown on autosomal DNA tests that modern Inuit people are 50% Mongolian/Siberian Asiatic and 50% Amerindian. The eastern-most Siberian groups like the Yukaghir and Koryak have around 20-25% Amerindian DNA. The Amerindian DNA has around 30-40% of the Ancient North Eurasian DNA (who are a Caucasoid-like people). The ANE component is very little (or none) in Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Mongolians and most Siberians. The Inuit, however, do have some ANE DNA in them. Inuit people are closer to eastern Asiatics but they still draw a lot from Amerindian DNA. That is why some pure-blooded Inuit people have higher noses and deeper eye-sockets (like many Amerindian groups, especially North American Amerindian groups). This comes from the Amerindian DNA (and by derivation, from the ANE component).
Inuit culture, language, and traditions are vital parts of Canada's heritage. Supporting Inuit peoples helps ensure the preservation and revitalization of their unique cultural identities, which can enrich the broader Canadian society.
Wait i though that the han where the oldest ethinic group in china or are they the oldest ethnic group in the world in fact what is the worlds oldest ethnic group
@@Qumayopotatosalad Australian Aboriginal people have the oldest lived culture in the world, not the oldest ethnic group. The oldest ethnic groups are in Africa.
Their legends say that the people went south. Some was away for hundreds of years, until they came back, and told of the different places they had found.
Surviving in Cold Weather: Traditional Clothing: Inuit clothing is often made from animal skins and furs, which provide excellent insulation. The clothing is designed to keep warmth in while allowing some moisture to escape. Garments like parkas, boots, and mittens are essential. Shelters: Historically, Inuit built igloos from snow blocks for temporary shelter, which provided thermal insulation. They also used tents made from animal skins and other materials. Diet: The traditional Inuit diet is high in fat and protein, consisting primarily of marine mammals (like seals and whales), fish, and land animals (like caribou). These foods help provide the necessary energy to maintain body heat in harsh climates. Hunting and Gathering: Inuit are skilled hunters and fishers, utilizing tools like harpoons and sleds to hunt effectively. They often use the seasonal availability of animals and resources to ensure a stable food supply. Community and Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge of the land, weather patterns, and animal behaviors is passed down through generations. Strong community bonds and cooperation during hunting and gathering activities are vital for survival. Transport: Traditional means of transportation, such as dog sleds and qamutiik (sleds), allow them to travel across snowy landscapes, facilitating hunting and trade.
I know the Mongolian language and the Inuit are not connected but they sound very similar to me. These are two people who survive almost entirely on meat.
These are very different race. One dependent of sea and one dependent of land, Mongols can't live in very cold land because their herds can't live in arctic tundra and Inuit can't live in land because there are no food they can hunt(they can't ride horses).
Nice summary. I've read a few stories about Inuit people and I have always been intrigued... seems like the hardest life imaginable. Your video was the starting point of my research. Thanks.
I am a Filipino here in Canada and I am surprised to hear that tje growing population of Filipinos in Alaska. And I admire this people they could withstand extremely cold place.
The Inuit have been affected perhaps worse than any other indigenous group by European colonization. The Canadian government came in to the place in the mid 1900s and overnight forced a previously highly mobile and spread out group of people to settle in towns. Life is extremely expensive when depending on food that has to be grown and shipped thousands of kilometers up north. I've also heard from a professor who lived up there that there is a severe crisis of drugs and alcohol. Given how remote they were for much of history, they had almost no exposure to these things until very recently and so I can imagine would have a hard time coping. Still, there are some amazing cultural practices. They practice consensus government at a local level. They even opened a brewery to try to get people not to drink liquor, and they are working on opening a university in Nunavut. The narwhal hunt takes precedence over pretty much anything else, including legal proceedings. Life is very different and the environment forces you to adapt, so makes sense that most visitors prior to the introduction of modern technology would have been forced to assimilate into their culture to survive. PS - Really cool fact about their ability to process high amounts of fat that would be detrimental to anyone else. Keep making interesting videos like these!
As someone who is Alaskan Native I really enjoyed your video. I think it would be cool if you could do a video on the different Athabaskan tribes of Alaska or the southeast.
I'm very curious about them as well, same with Eskimo peoples because I'm not entirely sure of their ethnic origins. If you don't mind, can you please answer me some questions? - I've heard a million times that the Inuit arrived way later in the Americas compared to other natives, they could be seen as a different ethnicity, not a part of "Amerindians" or "First nations". However, there's similar groups to the Inuit as well and I wonder if it's true for them as well. The Yupik were called together with the Inuit "Eskimos", so I suppose they'd also be included, but the Aleut, which are also linguistic and cultural relatives? Are they the same Arctic "race"/ethnicity? I'd assume so, since the Yupik and Aleut still exist in Siberia too. - I've also heard sometimes that the Athabaskans also arrived later, so are they like the Eskimo people? A lot of them live in the Arctic and Subarctic too. Does this mean that Southeast Athabaskans like the Navajo are technically also descendents of these Arctic races/tribes?
Excellent video and very well researched for any one who wants to know more about the Inuit and Eskimo people and their origins. The survival skills the Inuit developed over thousands of years living in the unforgiving Arctic climate is amazing. The seal, walrus and whale meat they eat, mostly Raw, would Repulse 99% of the world's people but that is how they have survived for thousands of years.
The only people that I'm in awe of in this world are pure blooded native red Indians and pure Eskimos, they've always facinated me since childhood, I hope to meet and shake hands with them one day👌
the word "eskimo" isnt preferred by native people of the north and in Alaska (where im from) we try not to say eskimo because it kind of skews together others cultures when their cultures arent the same. its their identity and to refer to them as eskimo can be kinda yikes. please don't approach someone and say "hey are you eskimo?" it isn't as bad as other words used to label people but its a word given to the natives by people not from that land so it can be kinda yikes
Thank you for saying this, it has also been used to degrade and dehumanize us and is tied to so much negative stereotyping and full on destruction of our identity as a people.
I had the honor of holding an Inupiaq mans hand while he was on his way out. It was like a baseball mitt! My hands have been called, "huge" by other men. However, this mans hands were so full of life, energy, story, heritage and mass! I can only imagine the life he lived, the genetics thereof, and the impact he had on this planet. So sad his passing. Looking back now, I feel he was taken too soon. Perhaps as an unfortunate sacrifice by an alien religion? His family being, "Christianized". All this makes me wanna dig him up and see if he was taken too soon! As so much tragedy has befallen this family. I weep at these thought. Unalakleet, I have never been there but still, you are somewhat known and somewhat missed.
My sister had her DNA done, somehow we have Inuit markers, I'm British but my great granddad was a French Canadian fur trader so it must come from his side of the family.
omg this video is the proof people can make researches on google and having it mostly accurate instead of asking me if we still live in igloos thank you.
One of their most important keys to survival in such an extreme environment was the fact that they traditionally utilized the kudlic. Which is practically a giant oil lamp. It consisted of stone fuel container, Arctic cotton as a wick, and whale blubber as the fuel. It was used to cook, melt ice for drinking water and also used to fuse the bricks of an igloo together. These were probably used for thousands of years in a climate lacking trees.
@@kunstnersjael it seems to me that there may have been many cultural similarities between the Inuit of Alaska and the indigenous culture of Greenland. What is the name of the of the indigenous culture of Greenland? I would love to learn more about them.
@@jasonlawrence2143 The people living there now belongs to the Thule culture, that wandered in from Canada (like all the previous inuit cultures in past millenias). But there are three cultures now: The eastern greenlenders are the oldest, and best preserved, thus richest culture. Then there is the western/south Greenlenders, most blended up with different europeans. And finally the latest arrivers, the inughuit in North Greenland, With the freshest immigration from Canada, Those three speak different dialects of greenlandic/inuit, In the old days people were nomads, today we live in western style cities and settlements, are educated in western/danish style schools, and have a literacy of 100 %. Only 5 % live off hunting as a profession, the rest have modern jobs of all kinds. But still, most people go hunting and fishing in their spare time and holidays. In collaboration with the danish government Greenland has had self government since 1979, and takes home more areas to self govern over the years. There is a renewed interest in discovering the old culture in these years, an urge in learning the old drumming/singing tradition, as this was prohibited by christian missionaries in the past...and very often all the different inuit cultures meet from all over the arctic regions/countries, and learn from each other, enjoy the cultural exchange,
Full marks for the script; I am so often put off by poor grammar based by boot strapping TH-cam content creators, as well as their stilted narration. The narrator also did a great job, well inflected, natural sounding, like a well informed person. Refreshing!
I love educating myself and peers of the true reality of our races evolutions. Such interesting and eye opening stuff! Really makes you wonder who we are and exactly where we came from. Id love to see the analysis of Chinese/Mongoloid DNA vs Native Americans, and how much the two races and/or possibly others, had integrated back in the 1400-1500s
Great video...my first wife is Filipino and both my kids are mixed, obviously. I have been to the Philippines twice, lived in Los Angeles for 30 years and so I know their culture really well...TOO well. Filipinos are amazingly hard working people and will go where there is work or opportunity for work, maybe the gold rush to that region brought them from say San Fransisco or Seattle...
The real Northern Water Tribe. It’d be cool if a Southern Tribe existed in Antarctica too.
@Da Boot But they never reached Antarctica (As far as we know, but very doubtful)
Masaman did a video on just such an alternate-historical Antarctica: th-cam.com/video/6QAEMAh2R6A/w-d-xo.html&app=desktop
The water tribe was probably based off of the Inuit
The Mapuche, in what is now Chile, were big on fishing before colonization
Da Boot the yaghan definitely were strong af, they survived at cold temperatures being naked. But don’t forget the Southern Hemisphere isn’t as cold as the Northern Hemisphere (excluding the Antarctic on where nobody lives). Tierra del Fuego is cold but cold like Iceland, with temperatures moderated by the ocean, not cold like Canada or Siberia.
Filipinos went to Alaska for work. Why they chose Alaska over Hawaii or California is beyond me. As a Filipino-American in San Diego, I can't fathom living in a place with such a radically different climate. Hats off to my brothers and sisters up there.
During the middle to late 20th century, Alaska was becoming a major port (because USSR closes her airspace for most US planes) and oil-producer. And it's in the Pacific.
Thats true I’ve been to Alaska and was surprised that out of every US state I’ve been to the most Filipinos were in Alaska. I’m from Alberta Canada theres also a high Filipino population here
More Money, better opportunities, certainly very harsh climate compared to homeland
It’s not that crazy
The winter in south alaska/anchorage. Is not that cold. Its very similar to chicago/detroit/boston/vermount/upstate new york weather
Because there is a warm pacific wind that warm the south part during winter.
Its the same reaso. why vancouver isnt cold enough to get snow despite its further north then toronto montreal boston chicago detroit. Its because of that pacific warm winds
The mountains area. And the northern part are very polar cold tho
The water tribes in Avatar are based off Inuits.
Really?
@Googoo ga ga it's yo boi Baby Yoda come on guys how could you not have noticed
And the Sun Warriors are based on the Aztec/Mayans Mesoamerica
Does that mean I can water bend my tears to deal with my problems lol
@@mahdi-wf1kv fire nation is Imperialistic Japan and earth nation is China who get conquered by Fire japans
And Air temples are shaolin Buddisht
They used to kiss with their noses , sing with their throats and have a dozens of different words for snow . They are friendly and not war like.
Fight over what?
Gib koccs They’ve got nothing and they’ll fight to the death for it
I am from Philippines and my DNA result said I am 6% Eskimo/Inuit. That means my great great grandparent is full eskimo. That's why I'm watching this video to learn about them. My family used to kiss with their noses too.
@@dreadpiraterobertsii4420 For all that snow, ice, rock, and freezing oceans of course.
th-cam.com/video/aK_vBNxMHsA/w-d-xo.html
I have an Inuit friend from Iqaluit, Nunavut. He stands over 6' tall. One day, I jokingly said that as tall as he was, there was probably a Viking in the woodpile. He laughed and said, probably, that his mother's people came from Thule.
Interesting
in the woodpile means "in his ancestry"?
FranKoPepez Not really but in this case yeah. If you're learning English don't bother memorizing that because almost nobody says it.
I used to teach high school in Tuktoyaktuk.
My preconceived notion of Inuit people being short and squat evaporated on the first day of class.
Some of the boys were around 6'6", and some of the girls were close to 6'.
They had surnames like Steen and Gruben, and the area had been a Norwegian whaling station since the late 19th century.
i’m half-Inuk and i’m about 6’5”, my dad is full-blood and around 6’1”. his father (according to him) was somewhere above 6’8”. crazy stuff!
I was born and raised in South Georgia, USA - thousands of miles from the Inuit. Yet, upon taking a DNA test to determine my ancestry, I found my mitochondrial DNA was traced back to a woman living on the land bridge between Russia and Alaska during the last Ice Age. She lived 13,500 years ago. Those having this particular mitochondrial haplogroup were, and are - predominately Inuit. Blew me away.
Another South Georgian on here watching and learning (albany)!
Honestly, I know my family came from Europe, immigrated to Cuba, and most likely have some African blood cause of the Slave Trade, and when I did My Heritage DNA test, I got Europe, Nigeria, and what was weird was I got 1.5% Inuit. Like... damn. I've been trying to figure out how that's possible, as Spaniards never went so far north and Africans weren't enslaved so far north so I'm just so confused... maybe during the Viking Age as I do have some Irish and Scottish blood, so perhaps I had some ancestors who went to Greenland and then Northern Canada?
If your maternal haplogroup is A2, B2,C, D or even X2 than your maternal line is Native American. Mine is A2. My mother is from Central America. No matter if your ancestors are from North central or South America these maternal haplogroups come from the original peoples that populated the entire American continent.
Haha you have cave DNA.
Inuit is already plural, Inuk being singular. No need to add the 's' to it, that's like saying 'peopleses'
Great people's. I've always enjoyed learning more about them.
ᖃᖓᑕᓲᒃᑯᕕᒻᒨᕆᐊᖃᓛᖅᑐᖓ
The levels of plastic, heavy metals, and industrial pollutants winding up in the ocean is a shame (in every way, but especially in the context of the Inuit). Inuit are basically apex predators, so all those pollutants that build up as the food chain goes upwards wind up in them.
I'm not sure how accurate this is, but I've read articles that state that levels of heavy metals are so high in some samples of Inuit breast milk (for example), that the breast milk could itself be classified as hazardous waste.
@Sho Tohara Why, I would move down a little...Why live a life of such hardships, and extreme conditions...I get it 500yrs ago, they had no choice, but in modern times they can move and live far better lives...
No! That apostrophe is wrong! : 3
@@scottcantdance804
That's sexy.
The Inuit don't wear coats every day of the year. They swim during summer just as we do. They tolerate the cold better as. They are climatized.
That's not true. We have less blood vessel just below the skin compared to other groups. In extreme weathers, the lack of the blood vessels make it easier to tolerate it. I can't stand the warm European winters, it's far too cold.
Lemou Kalista but we are talking about the Inuit. My wife is an outpost nurse, we see kids going in the water with just shorts.......id freeze my boys off if I went in...
@@Lemou2904 I have a question? do you predominately sweat from your nose?
Many Inuit have a belief system that incorporates animism, where natural elements and animals are acknowledged as having spirits. This worldview shapes their relationship with nature, emphasizing respect and balance.
I think the the Arctic is incredible; as a Canadian I feel very lucky to have such a place in our country, and I'm proud to have such a people as the Inuit as my fellow citizens.
I live a stone throw away from the arctic circle, but across the pond. The landscape up here is amazing aswell!
We can be your fellow citizens if you treat us with respect, no respect, we aren't going to be friendly
You bury them under school
I worked in the Arctic Circle for 4 weeks doing construction at a mine. Lots of Inuit working at the camp. They were very friendly. By far my favourite place I’ve had to work at, even if it got down to -60 degrees Celsius.
You're damn right, and don't put up with any disrespect for a minute. Love from Qallunaat from Montreal ❤️
I miss Alaska. So good to see many natives there.
Crazy Joe ??? Eskimos, death rate 43.5 years. Clogs your arteries, eating meat et cetera th-cam.com/video/6N7Sk1ZRohU/w-d-xo.html
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th-cam.com/video/jTttCfZsId8/w-d-xo.html Fish have Mercury 🎣☠️. One fish 🐟, 5 by catches 🔴🐠🦑🐡🦐🦞 throw overboard 😈, so you can have fish !!!
2.7 Trillion animals !!!!!! 5 minutes... 😈
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100% poop, that’s right, Turds, Faecal matter🧟♂️👄🦠💩🍔🥓🍗🍣🔴🐮⛓🤮 in your mouth💩(actual pictures). Science rules. That’s the science. 10 minutes, please watch everything. Why don’t you stop 👄💩🦠🍔 dirty poo boy !!! You’re absolutely disgusting !!!
“Everyone is doing it. Follow the leader, it’s a Cult👄💩🦠🍔👄💩🦠🍔..........“
No poo, if you have vegan burgers ✅🍔, vegan tacos, vegan curry... on TH-cam, Low price, no murder..
COVID-19 is meat and fish and chicken.... et cetera
Spanish flu, 1918s, 100 Million died, from pigs 🐷💩🦠🍖😵.
Coronavirus, From Bats, et cetera 🦇💩🦠🍖😵.
Bird Flu, From Chickens 🐔💩🦠🍗🐣😵.
Swine Flu From Pigs 🐖💩🦠🍖😵.
Mad Cows Disease, From Cows 🐄💨💩🦠🤪🥩😵.
SARS, From Bats 🦇💩🦠🍖😵.
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Stupid does, what stupid do 🧟♂️🦠💩🍖,🧟♂️🦠💩🍖....👈are you stupid ???.
Stabbing animals to death🧟♂️🦠💩🍔🔴🐮⛓🔫😈🔪. Don’t do it with your cute little dog 🐶, or a parakeet 🤗🦜, or piggies 🐷, oh wait, murder them, bludgeoned to death !!! Like Hitler and Stalin 🔴.... .
Murder is murder. Killing is killing. Holocaust is Holocaust, no matter WHAT !!!!
I don’t stab animals, I’m vegan ✅❤️😬🦷💪. Five years vegan, gaining muscle on a plant-based diet. Like a gorilla 🦍✅❤️😬🦷💪. Try it. Cheap, really good, muscle ✅💪. Delicious vegan food, from TH-cam. For vegan curry, or vegan tacos 🌮, or vegan oats ✅😋🌾🍏🍊🍓🥝........ 80,000 plant foods that’s edible......
Try it now, or you’re just a coward, and a hypocrite 🧟♂️🦠💩🔴🐷⛓🔨😈🔪
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Leo Licht the only thing this did is make me crave a burger
ANaea 👈 You are this, exactly th-cam.com/video/GPvYwA1SxPQ/w-d-xo.html .
Lee Vegan Delusional vegan goes on incoherent rant in a comments section of a video talking about the origin of the Inuits.
Lee Vegan Also I’m going to enjoy a big mac tonight as my dinner with a side of chicken nuggets.
I've always found them fascinating since they've developed a way of living to such an extreme environment.
It is probably because their ancestors were forced to live through the last ice age and some of them never left. So they had thousands of years of experience to back them up
Sexual
@@modoodles While others evolved, built cities, invented technology..
@@solmoman If technological advancement means destroying the planet, then we've simply devolved as a species.
lets not @@solmoman
3:16 "Imagine having to trek past thousands of miles of snow, ice, rock, and freezing oceans, only to make your home of snow, ice, rock, and freezing oceans." I loled at this 😂 Truly a fascinating group of people showing the testament of human resilience.
hahaha,,,,,but maybe they just assumed that the entire planet was like this so why go any further????,,,,,,,,,they never saw anything else,,,,,,,,,once you are born somewhere its in your blood and don't want to go anywhere else,,,,,,,,,
@@devi3350 ,,,,,,,,,,
@@devi3350 it helps keep the more poisonous people that work less, away. incredibly smart move, in chess this would be the corner move.
Despite having a diet high in fats, studies have shown that traditional Inuit communities have lower rates of heart disease. This phenomenon is often attributed to their active lifestyle and the benefits of omega-3 fatty acids from marine animals.
hey, i’m half-Inuk! father’s family is originally from Greenland. so cool to see you talking about us.
Really nice to get to know you. Rey interesting cultures. Amazing.
Inuktituungni ayungikavii?
@Vincent T. 🙄🙄🙄
@Fortune Haluu, Qanoq ippit? ^^
Quarter! Mum's half. We're from Nunavut in Canada! Good to know there are others interested in the culture.
The Arctic has always been a region I wanted to visit for a long time and hopefully I’ll make it one day. 🇺🇸 🇨🇦🇫🇮🇬🇱🇮🇸🇳🇴🇷🇺🇸🇪
Fly to Montreal there are many flights to iqaloit.
The kayak, originally crafted from seal skin and frame made of driftwood or bone, was an essential hunting tool. Its design allows for nimble movement in icy waters and demonstrates impressive engineering adapted to the environment.
Inuits aka life on difficult more
Man these guys are mad lads.
You know just surviving on in the arctic.
Yeah,we can say that
@edge lord I know you from Wawamustats
"Ah yes, difficult mode" you mean everyday shenanigans, this bick easy
Inuit is already plural, Inuk being singular- no need for the 's' at the end of Inuit
Inuit diets are traditionally high in animal fat and protein, which is essential for survival in the cold climate. Foods like raw seal and fish are part of their nutrition, and this practice can be shocking to those unfamiliar with it.
They are the brothers of the Chukotko-Kamchatkans.
Masaman should make a video about them
ᖃᖓᑕᓲᒃᑯᕕᒻᒨᕆᐊᖃᓛᖅᑐᖓ
@@ZecaNieto actually massaman should do a video on the ainu pepole and how they are related to the inuit native Canadian and native Siberian pepoles
@@jadefields9020 He already has an Ainu video I believe
@@jadefields9020 There already are a bunch of videos about that, including from masaman
The people who put the Scandinavians and Russians to shame😂
@Asbjørn it would new interesting to see their people compete in strongman competitions
Phew. That was a close call mate.
@@nomad155 World Eskimo Indian Olympics (aka WEIO) every year..held in Alaska. However this year it is a no Olympic games...year....check out some of the videos...
@Cali God - Any source on that?
Sami
I’m Inuit from Iqaluit, Nunavut. A lot of the info in this video is inaccurate, but overall educative. Thanks for the effort you put in though!
@nunaninja
wow,Nice to see a comment from a Inuit 😊
Uvanga arviat miutaugama
As a Canadian it seems to be difficult to get good information if you havent learned it previously
Uanga tunni Adloat. Atiga Adloat... kingikmiuturunga (Wales, Alaska)
hey man i have an assignment abou inuits if u can help me it would be awesome
My biological mother was Inuit and a little bit danish. My father was German French English Scottish and a bit of Welsh. I was born in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut. So I’m a pretty unique looking person being about half Inuit :) I’m 25 now and 5 foot 9 inches tall and never been more than 133 pounds in my life. I have an extremely fast metabolism and a very lean body. I love my lineage ❤️ Quaana means thank you :)
Got a instagram?
You mean at your biological mother was inuk, not inuit.
Your mother was *Inuk, not inuit. Inuit is a plural and inuk single.
Are you white?
i am inuit from northern quebec
i'm also 5'9 and i have been 133 pounds my whole adult life
Really appreciate you uploading all this stuff considering how taboo race and ethnicity have become for us to talk about. Thanks for your hard work 👍
Freyja Frigg as humans we’ve always been thrown all together, & as the global population rises it will become more unavoidable
It's not really taboo to talk about ethnicities and races as long as we stay respectful.
Freyja Frigg there will be always be differences even if we all mixed tomorrow, just because of the physical distances between us. Stop fearing “homogeneity pushes by the globalists” because it’s realistically impossible. Even if we develop trains that get you across the world in 5 minutes, and we all mixed, it can’t ever be homogenized and stay that way.
I'm sure others have commented, but North American Inuit (Or Alaskan natives as they are called in the US) find the term Eskimo offensive. It is actually a native american (Algonquin) word not a colonial pejorative. However, Eskimo is the scientific word used by linguists to describe the larger people who inhabit the north and share a common language (This excludes the Sami of Lapland). Although often ignored by the Inuit, the Yupik people of Siberia share a common linguistic root and that larger people, made up of two distinct cultures (Inuit and Yupik) are Eskimos.
No not all Alaska Natives belong to the Inuit, Yupik, Aleut. Glad you mentioned the Yupik too. The very colorful picture of Natives with Raven and other Clan symbols are Tlingit people.
I love all the inventions they made to adapt to their environment, like waterproof gutskin parkas, snow goggles made from slits in carved bones, towns made from whale and walrus bone, and of course, igloos!
These are the people we should send to Mars. Why train people when these people are tougher and stronger than any humans ever?
Being an astronaut on Mars doesn't have much to do with hunting seals. : /
You can't survive outside without a suit, no matter what.
@@MrCmon113 of course, I wasn't being wholly serious. However, I'm willing to bet if you could train an Inuit to be a scientist astronaut they would be excellent due to their toughness and thinking ability. Besides physical attributes it surely takes intelligence to thrive in that environment they live in.
Inuit wouldn’t accept it lol
Fostering positive relationships with Inuit communities can enhance national unity and social cohesion. Building partnerships based on respect and mutual understanding can lead to better governance and shared decision-making.
@@hermeticxhaote4723 You are looking at only their current environment. The truth is, all Neo Mongoloids and Caucasoids descend from peoples who made it through the last glacial maximum in harsh conditions, and intelligence was evolved in these groups already, which was preserved after the end of ice age
Hey! That's me! I'm one of those! Hi, I'm an aleut and boy are my arms tired!
No, but really, I am from the Aleut confederation; it's pretty rare and hard to find other people [let alone full modern videos] that delve into the complex and OLD Inuit histories. Most of my best sources are old russian anthropologists, and obviously the people around me but that's rather one sided.
It might be interesting if you were to do a video on the old Inuit tribes "science" and type of social progress; for example most Inuit tribes had a developed knowledge of the spherical shape of the earth, very advanced navigation, calendars and season charts, and my own tribe had an advanced knowledge of evolution as observed [and ironically criticised] by an early 18th century russian. I'd love to know what my cousins from greenland were up to, it's so hard to ask them as they speak Dutch or something
Wow, thanks man, I'm glad. I'm just trying to spread historical information to other Americans and people all around the world!
Hi there- I live in 5:29 my husband is Aleut. Relative to other native groups, Aleuts are fairly rare, but there still are many folks alive and well in Alaska and on the west coast and through Wisconsin and Montana. There are about 20 different Aleut/Unangan tribal organizations and/or corporations by which you can use to connect with your peoples. Just search the internet- they are extremely accessible.
Eskimo has come to be seen as a pejorative term in Canada and Greenland and has been replaced by Inuit in both those countries, whereas in Alaska (and in the United States in general), Eskimo is still a common term.
It kinda sucks since there's no replacement. The definiton of Eskimo is Inuits and Yupiks who both descended from one people and speak similar languages. And Yupiks don't want to be called Inuit. It's not inclusive for them. Although the Aleuts also descended from the same people but linguistically they've diverged way more.
So maybe I have some ideas : either you say that they're "Eskimoan speakers" to Inuits and Yupiks and "Eskaliut speakers" to Inuits, Yupiks and Aleuts (those words are kinda necessary for talking about specific history... When I hear something about the "Inuits" I can never know if it includes the Yupiks or not). Or maybe replace Eskimo with "Greater Inuit people" and Inuit with "Lesser Inuit people"
Especially since they're not only closely related people, they're technically even their own ethnicity or "race" different from ALL other indigenous people of the americas, since they arrived way later.
BTW I've found an actually viable replacement : indigenous people of the American Arctic. But it seems not that much convinient.
Alaskan here. No, "Eskimo" is not a term that is used any longer. And if you do, you're showing how ignorant you are.
Really? Interesting. In Poland it's not pejorative at all. Same as "murzyn" for black ppl. On the other hand term "Cyganie" (gypsies) were pejorative and it was replaced with "Romowie".
Very interesting ethnicity study of the Inuit people and population of the arctic. I always find it fascinating how certain peoples have evolved to survive off a specific diet and way of life.
Hi anika rose
Nobody say inuit people, only inuit. Because the word inuit means people.
@@daveshen0880You can be a people person and Inuit at the same time
@@BigDaddy-je2nq Nope.
Inuit storytelling often blends myth and reality, passing down legends and lessons through generations. These stories frequently involve animals and the environment, reflecting their worldview and values.
I am Puertorican and recently found out that besides having Mesoamerican dna i also have 1% inuit dna in my...am so fascinated and exited about this, the fact that a have a tiny part of this beautiful tribe in me means the world to me.
(not so) Fun fact - the Inuits of Alaska had a very hostile relationship with the Chukchi, often engaging in attacks against each other. The last Chukchi-Inuit battle took place in 1947.
Even better fact: Japan occupied a number of islands of Alaska during WWII, and the USA asked the Natives of Alaska to join the Alaska Territorial Guards to help combat the Japanese. Men, women and children were allowed to join, and they helped the US Army and other military forces in so many ways.
Why?
@@jgxrt988 The Chukchis were very warlike in the past and engaged fights with all their neighbours. They are also the only nation the Russians couldn't beat in order to make them join the Russian empire, but soon they voluntarily joined anyway. Pretty interesting nation if you ask me.
@@Linduine Yeah, they used to be tough motherf@ckers. Unfortunately became victims of alcoholism in Soviet times, and turned into objects of jokes (kinda like Irish in British jokes).
Inuit is already plural, singular being Inuk. No need to add the s, that's like saying 'peopleses'
my little sister lives in Alaska for a few months a year at a fish processing plant. she’s says the vast vast majority of her coworkers are filipino.
Filipinos are everywhere!
This traditional form of music involves two women producing vocal sounds that mimic the sounds of nature and can be quite complex. It is often performed as a friendly competition and is an important part of cultural expression.
Thanks to you Masaman, when WW3 and nuclear winter happens, we all know who will be the last humans left.
I'm an Aleut eskimo, Unangan, and I find our genetic and historical history supremely interesting in compound with our culture
I find inuits also intresting because of their connections to siberia, its also theorized they are related to some siberian people (uralo-siberian language theory)
Traditional Inuit subsistence relies heavily on hunting marine mammals, such as seals, whales, and walrus. This practice is deeply embedded in their culture and survival techniques in the harsh Arctic environment.
I love this channel by the way ♥
Hey Masaman, would you like the Idea of making ethnic maps of historical regions??
Like maybe do a Map of the eastern coast of the US with the Native tribes in it or one of Pre-Achaemenid Iran with the Medes, Sargartians, Marangians, Parthians, Persians, Zarangi, Carmanians, Utii, etc.
You're looking for the Atlantians. RH negative right? Denmark?
Possible future names of Denmark (a country with a majority Turkish people and a Inuit minority in the future)
´´Danimarkalılar Ülkesi VE Far'dan Gelenler´´
´´Danimarka ve birkaç inuit´´
´´Eskimo(Eskimolar) ülkesi´´
´´Danimarkalilar ülkesi ve eskimolar´´
ᖃᖓᑕᓲᒃᑯᕕᒻᒨᕆᐊᖃᓛᖅᑐᖓ
It'd be hard to make a historic map of native Americans in pre Columbian America would be tremendous difficult due to how quickly land changed hands.
There have been numerous efforts to map out pre-Colombian America, but they can never be fully accurate because of the lack of records and the purposeful destruction of existing records by European settlers.
Still, you may want to check this out: native-land.ca/
Some of the most interesting people on the planet. They have some truly unique and often horrifying folklore
There are a lot of interesting people on this planet of all different backgrounds. Not just them.
@Xuntoslzor totally agree!
While often associated solely with the Inuit, igloos were just one of many types of dwellings in the Arctic. They are ingeniously designed from compacted snow, providing effective insulation against extreme cold.
Can you make a video about the ethnicities of Dagestan?
(Avars, Lezgins, Dargins, Tabasaran etc.)
Are you from Dagestan?
@@ChefRafi No, Im Norwegian on my mothers side and Kosovo-Albanian on my fathers side.
But, my best friend is from Dagestan of Lezgian descent.
Linguistics A. M nice mix! I should have included Dagestan in my European proverbs video.
@@ChefRafi Thank you :)
Linguistics A. M Sounds like Albin Kurti‘s son lol
Great video! I'd love to learn more about the indigenous peoples of the Rocky Mountains in North America and their adaptations to the extremes of that environment. Thank you for your excellent research as always :)
Masan I’ve got a theory that I was hoping you could possibly look in to. I was a researcher at the California Academy of Sciences a year ago and I met some brilliant people working there. One of which was an anthropologist. He explained to me that the ancestors of Native Americans(excluding the Inuits) must have began their trek in the world starting in South America, sailing from Oceania. He said that the anthropological evidence makes it clear. Some of the oldest evidence of humans in the Americas were found in South America. He also explained that by examining the relative genetic diversity within gene pools across the continent, he deduced that the northern populations must have bottlenecked from the southern. He also pointed out that Native American populations share a genetic commonality with southeast Asian and Oceanian populations, particularly in the y-chromosome. There is even evidence that the Native America languages may have been influenced by Oceania. Indigenous South American languages pronounce “sweet potato” the same way as some Polynesian languages. Sweet potatoes grew in South America before Columbus. This plant is not native to the continent of South America, they come from Polynesia. Carbon dating shows they have grown in the America’s since at least 1000 AD. The westerlies blow from Oceania to South America. This could have been the current that carried humans to the new continent. I was hoping you could examine what the genetic evidence says about this theory.
Native American are indeed southeast asian origin. Go to southwest China& Vietnam villages , you can find some people have same custom as NA.Y chromesome of NA (haplogroup Q ,haplogroup C) have southeast asian origin. btw i visited some southwest china rural areas and find some blond & red hair people there. I believe they are ancestor of Germanic people.
Yes! this would be a very interesting topic! I think the evidence you are talking about is the Monteverde site in south Chile, my country. But as far as I know, there is an older (currently the oldest) site found in North America. But, it always puzzled me the existence of the Mapuche Chicken (something similar to the sweet potato case you mention). The Mapuche, the major indigenous group in these latitudes of Chile and Argentina, bred a variety of chicken native to America (I call the Americas just America hehe) that has no tail bone and lays blue eggs. Once I read in a newspaper that apparently these chicken are relatated to polinesian chicken, suggesting contact or ancestry of South American indigenous groups with Polinesians. Also, the Mapuche language or Mapuzugun is still not classified in any language family, no one is certain about its origin.
@@FranKoPepez I mean it wouldnt be crazy to think that the polinesians went to S. America. Was'nt it them who built the statues on Easter islands? The Viking's sailed from Scandinavia to North america, so to sail from easter island at that time would be very possible.
But in Scandinavia we also have these "native" looking tribes, called Samí. And our Samí people share alot of dna to the counter parts in North America, so they did atleast cross the landbridge at some point, either from NA to Europe, or the other way around.
www.google.com/search?q=old+sami+people&tbm=isch&hl=sv&nfpr=1&hl=sv&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjo0IKVgZHrAhVXyioKHfySBysQBXoECAEQKQ&biw=1903&bih=1007#imgrc=O7Zo5VsbO0IyCM&imgdii=0e2AqdMUjs4NnM
@@yumiryin8197 thats nonsense no they dont amerindian share alot of haplogroups with mongolian and especially siberian
The sweet potato was in southeast asia before it was in polynesian. I mean we all know polynesian derive from the Island southeast asias, no secret anymore.
According to the anthropological Centers of the
universities of Harvard, Stanford, Oxford and Canberra Austronesian people (Island South East Asians, Polynesians, Micronesians, Madagascar and many Amazonian Tribes) have the haplogroup O1a + O2a + the haplogroup e (one of the oldest haplogroups in the world only found in austronesian people). The first austronesian culture was the Hemudu Culture (6000 BCE) then the Liangzhu Culture (4500 BCE) on the coastal areas of china (not related to ethnic chinese or han chinese people but way older people who isolated themselves). These tribes travelled downward to Taiwan and settled there (Taiwanese Aboriginies), travelled further downward to the Philippines, Malaysia (Borneo), Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and from there into all the different Islands of the south pacific as far as the easter islands. Polynesians on the other Hand are up to 79% of austronesian descent and only up to 21% of melanesian descent.
I'm originally from the Philippines🇵🇭 and surprisingly found in my DNA test about my Inuit ancestry and European ancestry. Am I bit shocked 😲 but at the same time proud of my ancestors 😊❤️
The term “Eskimo” is actually a really offensive term to the native people of the north. I am indigenous of Canada with multiple ties with the Inuit people. Good content though.
@Mikael Desnos but that doesn't mean it isn't offensive for them, if the community finds in offensive, then use the politically correct term
@Mikael Desnos are you dumb? Let’s just call black people or white people offensive terms because it’s well known.
@@merrillgeorge1838 because it means “eater of raw meat” and was used to degrade Inuit culture in the past. There’s quite few reasons also.
You must be a liberal
Nobody gives a f
Amazing content. As a member of inuit from Greenland, I find your video educating. Since, us in Greenland have learned much more about European/danish history rather than our own.
@Ilannguaq Sakariassen
Yeah,should learn own😊
It would be cool to hear about others who live in extreme environments. Maybe those of southern pacific islands, like tasmania or easter island if you haven't already done those
Extreme? Rapa Nui maybe for its small land area and large population at one point, but Tasmania must be one of the most temperate and benign environments on earth, surely!
Maybe Easter Island because of its isolation... polinesians who made it there never came back, and polinesians were ocean travelers. But, the island wasn't the harshest, it has a subtropical climate, what (probably) happened there is that the island resources were overexploited, although there are still controversies.
Lance Powers, your idea of extreme is mixed up. Extreme is related to harsh temp and pressured environments like the Arctic's ,deserts, volcanoes, mountains (like Everest with thin air), and even in outer space.
@@8kigana never would have thought one word would get so many internet geographers so upset! Lol I will stay away from that word in the future
@@lancepowers6337 nobody is upset with you why do you think that🤔? I get corrected all the time on here don't take it personal 😉.
1) Filipinos work in the fisheries, 2) Filipino American G I s stationed in Alaska stayed and settled 3) Filipino women moved with GI husbands to Alaska and settled, 4) Filipino women married civilian Alaskan men and settled in Alaska
I love learning about Alaskan natives, thank you for making these videos.
"Major cities in Greenland, Nunavut, and Alaska" yes, all the Major Cities of the far north
Anchorage is huge
You know major, refers to the biggest city in that country / region.
I'm being facetious here, I know that major is relative
It truly boggles my mind that human beings would voluntarily live in such extreme conditions for 4,000 years. That’s mind blowing!!!!!
as an Alaskan, I really appreciate this upload.
As a Finnish-lsraeli-American, who was born and raised in Finland, l have always been fascinated by the Eskimos and lnuit of even further north. Their interactions with the Norse, who called both the lnuit and the lndians "skraelingar" ("weaklings"), in what would become Canada, are also of major interest.
Another far-northerly group that l am fascinated with are the Saami (Sami, "Lapps") of Finland, Sweden, Norway and Russia, who are actually several peoples with interrelated, although not quite mutually intelligible, languages.
Mason, it'd be cool if you made a video about the people of the Amazon River area. Particularly, the indigenous tribes living there.
I believe the Inuit loved living in the northern region because of the ability to live in peace and quiet as it was uninhabited and they learn to live off the land to keep their distance
The Inuit look really similar to Tibetans (Esp. Northern Tibetans) !! Similar culture, way of living and clothing. But the connection is probably due to our ancestors from Siberia! Anyways this is a great video (just subscribed) you should make a video about Tibet :)
I found a picture of my grandmother on the internet while looking through French pictures along side the photographers pictures of Tibetans, comparing the similarities between us.
Our spiritual beliefs are very much connected as well, it's quite beautiful
thanks for that, Tsetan. speaking as citizen of the USA, i am ashamed of what was done to the native people.
she really said people people
The inuit people is wrong. You have just said "Inuit Inuit" Inuit means People.
My daughter a Newfoundland islander, has lived and taught school in Makkovik, Labrador in Nunatsiovit. I myself have done work along the north coast in that region, and have made many great Inuit friends. It is a land that is not for the weak at heart.
"world's most extreme survivors"
*tuaregs want to know your location*
Cold weather is harder than warm climate I think.
Siceliot Infections and diseases fester more in warm climates. I’d still choose warm over cold.
Yaghans also want that location
Polynesians crossing pacific ocean in the haus
"Tuareg is plural, singular is "targi/targiya.
Many Filipino people in Alaska work in fish/seafood canneries. I also had many interactions with eskimo people having been stationed in western AK.
Filipinos are all over the world xD
Hey Mason great job always. I've been wanting to learn more about the Thule people and their relationships with the Dorset, Inuit, and southerly tribes.
Thanks for another great video Mason.
Very interesting topic; I have a small percentage of Siberian and Inuit ancestry myself.
I absolutely love arctic culture! This was such an enjoyable video.
You do realise that it's cultures, since the there's European and Asian arctic, too.
Inuit communities have traditional knowledge that is invaluable for understanding and managing the Arctic environment. Supporting them in environmental stewardship can lead to better conservation practices and responses to climate change.
Inuit people are very different from the Amerindian peoples of the Americas in custom, looks, language, temperament, etc. They are more related to the Asiatic people in eastern Siberia.
We don't even share the same ancestors because we are separated by 15 000 years.
We Mongols share DNA with them. And I do believe Inuits are from Siberia.
@@enkhzayazundui1063 They only share 50% of the DNA with Mongolians and Siberians. The other 50% is Amerindian. However, the cultures of the different Inuit groups are closer to Mongolians and Siberians than Amerindians. Amerindians think and do things very differently from Inuits and eastern Asiatic peoples.
@@rickgrimes5441 50% ? That is too high, I think. All those 1000s years they must have mixed with locals and others. But still we share Siberian DNA with today's inuits.
I hope. 🤞
@@enkhzayazundui1063 It's been shown on autosomal DNA tests that modern Inuit people are 50% Mongolian/Siberian Asiatic and 50% Amerindian. The eastern-most Siberian groups like the Yukaghir and Koryak have around 20-25% Amerindian DNA. The Amerindian DNA has around 30-40% of the Ancient North Eurasian DNA (who are a Caucasoid-like people). The ANE component is very little (or none) in Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Mongolians and most Siberians. The Inuit, however, do have some ANE DNA in them. Inuit people are closer to eastern Asiatics but they still draw a lot from Amerindian DNA. That is why some pure-blooded Inuit people have higher noses and deeper eye-sockets (like many Amerindian groups, especially North American Amerindian groups). This comes from the Amerindian DNA (and by derivation, from the ANE component).
Very interesting stuff. I have great respect for the Eskimos; how they learned to live off the sea in such appalling climatic conditions.
If you wanna respect us start off by calling us Inuit* Eskimo is offensive to are people.
@@adammathewsie8971 eskimo means, "snowshoe-makers" in algonquin
Inuit culture, language, and traditions are vital parts of Canada's heritage. Supporting Inuit peoples helps ensure the preservation and revitalization of their unique cultural identities, which can enrich the broader Canadian society.
Definitely one of my favorite channels. Really really interesting!
Do one video about Finno-Ugrics, please!
Do one on China's oldest ethnic group, the Miao people.
Wait i though that the han where the oldest ethinic group in china or are they the oldest ethnic group in the world in fact what is the worlds oldest ethnic group
How about Tibetans?
mahdi what about aboriginal Australians
@@mahdi-wf1kv what about san bushmen people
@@Qumayopotatosalad Australian Aboriginal people have the oldest lived culture in the world, not the oldest ethnic group. The oldest ethnic groups are in Africa.
Nice 1 this is a great subject to cover. I travel and would love to be amongst these folk. Top stuff again Mason you little gem 💎
you should do one on the athabaskan people of alaska and how their related to the navajo down south
Their legends say that the people went south. Some was away for hundreds of years, until they came back, and told of the different places they had found.
Their is an athabaskan reserve right beside calgary so they definitely have a history travelling south.
Surviving in Cold Weather:
Traditional Clothing: Inuit clothing is often made from animal skins and furs, which provide excellent insulation. The clothing is designed to keep warmth in while allowing some moisture to escape. Garments like parkas, boots, and mittens are essential.
Shelters: Historically, Inuit built igloos from snow blocks for temporary shelter, which provided thermal insulation. They also used tents made from animal skins and other materials.
Diet: The traditional Inuit diet is high in fat and protein, consisting primarily of marine mammals (like seals and whales), fish, and land animals (like caribou). These foods help provide the necessary energy to maintain body heat in harsh climates.
Hunting and Gathering: Inuit are skilled hunters and fishers, utilizing tools like harpoons and sleds to hunt effectively. They often use the seasonal availability of animals and resources to ensure a stable food supply.
Community and Knowledge Sharing: Knowledge of the land, weather patterns, and animal behaviors is passed down through generations. Strong community bonds and cooperation during hunting and gathering activities are vital for survival.
Transport: Traditional means of transportation, such as dog sleds and qamutiik (sleds), allow them to travel across snowy landscapes, facilitating hunting and trade.
I know the Mongolian language and the Inuit are not connected but they sound very similar to me. These are two people who survive almost entirely on meat.
These are very different race. One dependent of sea and one dependent of land, Mongols can't live in very cold land because their herds can't live in arctic tundra and Inuit can't live in land because there are no food they can hunt(they can't ride horses).
Nice summary. I've read a few stories about Inuit people and I have always been intrigued... seems like the hardest life imaginable.
Your video was the starting point of my research. Thanks.
I am a Filipino here in Canada and I am surprised to hear that tje growing population of Filipinos in Alaska. And I admire this people they could withstand extremely cold place.
There are also quite a few in the Northwest territories, they move up there for stable work and are such a great part of the community
Filipino goes to everywhere due to no jobs in Philippine
The Inuit have been affected perhaps worse than any other indigenous group by European colonization. The Canadian government came in to the place in the mid 1900s and overnight forced a previously highly mobile and spread out group of people to settle in towns. Life is extremely expensive when depending on food that has to be grown and shipped thousands of kilometers up north. I've also heard from a professor who lived up there that there is a severe crisis of drugs and alcohol. Given how remote they were for much of history, they had almost no exposure to these things until very recently and so I can imagine would have a hard time coping. Still, there are some amazing cultural practices. They practice consensus government at a local level. They even opened a brewery to try to get people not to drink liquor, and they are working on opening a university in Nunavut. The narwhal hunt takes precedence over pretty much anything else, including legal proceedings. Life is very different and the environment forces you to adapt, so makes sense that most visitors prior to the introduction of modern technology would have been forced to assimilate into their culture to survive.
PS - Really cool fact about their ability to process high amounts of fat that would be detrimental to anyone else. Keep making interesting videos like these!
Seemed Inuit people are very friendly. Am gonna learn about them.
Basically you wrote, people people. Because the word inuit means people.
You're extremely underrated dude. Wish you had more subs. Also, Merry Christmas.
As someone who is Alaskan Native I really enjoyed your video. I think it would be cool if you could do a video on the different Athabaskan tribes of Alaska or the southeast.
I'm very curious about them as well, same with Eskimo peoples because I'm not entirely sure of their ethnic origins. If you don't mind, can you please answer me some questions?
- I've heard a million times that the Inuit arrived way later in the Americas compared to other natives, they could be seen as a different ethnicity, not a part of "Amerindians" or "First nations". However, there's similar groups to the Inuit as well and I wonder if it's true for them as well. The Yupik were called together with the Inuit "Eskimos", so I suppose they'd also be included, but the Aleut, which are also linguistic and cultural relatives? Are they the same Arctic "race"/ethnicity? I'd assume so, since the Yupik and Aleut still exist in Siberia too.
- I've also heard sometimes that the Athabaskans also arrived later, so are they like the Eskimo people? A lot of them live in the Arctic and Subarctic too. Does this mean that Southeast Athabaskans like the Navajo are technically also descendents of these Arctic races/tribes?
Excellent video and very well researched for any one who wants to know more about the Inuit and Eskimo people and their origins. The survival skills the Inuit developed over thousands of years living in the unforgiving Arctic climate is amazing. The seal, walrus and whale meat they eat, mostly Raw, would Repulse 99% of the world's people but that is how they have survived for thousands of years.
Inuits-Salute to them for their Survival in most toughest conditions, they inspire the world. Nice information thanks
*Inuit, putting a letter s in word inuit is incorrect.
Very interesting video. It's sad to hear about the high suicide rates among the Inuits, though.
Inuit is plural, inuk is singular. Saying 'inuits' is like saying 'peopleses'
The only people that I'm in awe of in this world are pure blooded native red Indians and pure Eskimos, they've always facinated me since childhood, I hope to meet and shake hands with them one day👌
The history of the people of the Americas is fascinating. Great video.
the word "eskimo" isnt preferred by native people of the north and in Alaska (where im from) we try not to say eskimo because it kind of skews together others cultures when their cultures arent the same. its their identity and to refer to them as eskimo can be kinda yikes. please don't approach someone and say "hey are you eskimo?" it isn't as bad as other words used to label people but its a word given to the natives by people not from that land so it can be kinda yikes
Thank you for saying this, it has also been used to degrade and dehumanize us and is tied to so much negative stereotyping and full on destruction of our identity as a people.
*I've been asking for this video for a long time now!*
I had the honor of holding an Inupiaq mans hand while he was on his way out. It was like a baseball mitt! My hands have been called, "huge" by other men. However, this mans hands were so full of life, energy, story, heritage and mass! I can only imagine the life he lived, the genetics thereof, and the impact he had on this planet.
So sad his passing. Looking back now, I feel he was taken too soon. Perhaps as an unfortunate sacrifice by an alien religion? His family being, "Christianized".
All this makes me wanna dig him up and see if he was taken too soon!
As so much tragedy has befallen this family. I weep at these thought.
Unalakleet, I have never been there but still, you are somewhat known and somewhat missed.
Very educational and an eye opener! Thank you for the video!
Would love to learn more about indigenous groups living in Australia’s interior
Masaman rocks. I've been following you for a couple years now, keep up the good work.
My sister had her DNA done, somehow we have Inuit markers, I'm British but my great granddad was a French Canadian fur trader so it must come from his side of the family.
I'm 1% inuit lol
Thank you bro I learn a lot about cultures and history from your channel
Super vidéo explicative! Très intéressant. Belle perspective globale de l'évolution de ce grand peuple.
Inuvialuit here. Nicely put together.
You should do more videos about the indigenous peoples of the americas 👍👌
omg this video is the proof people can make researches on google and having it mostly accurate
instead of asking me if we still live in igloos thank you.
Just found out I’m 2.4% Inuit. Fascinating to learn about this people.
I'm 1% inuit.. Mostly Finnish
I'm less than 1% inuit but I have some inuit ancestors 😊
*Inuk.
@@trmp9923You mean at you are 1 percent inuk?
Single: Inuk. Plural: Inuit.
And inuit means People or folk.
@@daveshen0880 yea Myheritage dna had Inuit for some reason, Northern Canada region
I’m Siberian Yupik, I’m born and raised in Alaska. I feel most comfortable in cooler temperatures and I think it’s miserable to be in hot climates
One of their most important keys to survival in such an extreme environment was the fact that they traditionally utilized the kudlic. Which is practically a giant oil lamp. It consisted of stone fuel container, Arctic cotton as a wick, and whale blubber as the fuel. It was used to cook, melt ice for drinking water and also used to fuse the bricks of an igloo together. These were probably used for thousands of years in a climate lacking trees.
If it were used for thousands of years, that means we, Inuit, a 1 000-1 200 year old group can't take credit for the invention of that.
In Greenland the stonelamp was fueled by seal blubber and mosses were used as a wick
@@Lemou2904 thank you for the information!
@@kunstnersjael it seems to me that there may have been many cultural similarities between the Inuit of Alaska and the indigenous culture of Greenland. What is the name of the of the indigenous culture of Greenland? I would love to learn more about them.
@@jasonlawrence2143 The people living there now belongs to the Thule culture, that wandered in from Canada (like all the previous inuit cultures in past millenias). But there are three cultures now: The eastern greenlenders are the oldest, and best preserved, thus richest culture. Then there is the western/south Greenlenders, most blended up with different europeans. And finally the latest arrivers, the inughuit in North Greenland, With the freshest immigration from Canada, Those three speak different dialects of greenlandic/inuit,
In the old days people were nomads, today we live in western style cities and settlements, are educated in western/danish style schools, and have a literacy of 100 %. Only 5 % live off hunting as a profession, the rest have modern jobs of all kinds. But still, most people go hunting and fishing in their spare time and holidays.
In collaboration with the danish government Greenland has had self government since 1979, and takes home more areas to self govern over the years.
There is a renewed interest in discovering the old culture in these years, an urge in learning the old drumming/singing tradition, as this was prohibited by christian missionaries in the past...and very often all the different inuit cultures meet from all over the arctic regions/countries, and learn from each other, enjoy the cultural exchange,
Full marks for the script; I am so often put off by poor grammar based by boot strapping TH-cam content creators, as well as their stilted narration.
The narrator also did a great job, well inflected, natural sounding, like a well informed person.
Refreshing!
I'd always heard "Aleutian" as a geographic adjective, and "Aleut" as an ethnic/linguistic term
You are correct
I love educating myself and peers of the true reality of our races evolutions. Such interesting and eye opening stuff! Really makes you wonder who we are and exactly where we came from. Id love to see the analysis of Chinese/Mongoloid DNA vs Native Americans, and how much the two races and/or possibly others, had integrated back in the 1400-1500s
Great video...my first wife is Filipino and both my kids are mixed, obviously. I have been to the Philippines twice, lived in Los Angeles for 30 years and so I know their culture really well...TOO well.
Filipinos are amazingly hard working people and will go where there is work or opportunity for work, maybe the gold rush to that region brought them from say San Fransisco or Seattle...
Magandang gabi kaibigan
Can you make a video about the mountain Tajiks who preserved a special distinct appearance which seperate them from the rest of central Asia? ☺️
The Pamiris (Eastern Iranic like Ossetian)
@@PersianHistorian no not Pamiris but mountain Tajiks. Know the difference
@@mohammadmian-thecanadian-p1594 all tajiks live on mountains dude 😂
@@PersianHistorian we have nothing to do with iranic kiranic
@@mohammadmian-thecanadian-p1594 Then why do Tajiks and Persians speak the same language?
"Human extremophiles" lmao
These people are very brave and strong because I'd never live in Arctic.
You do know that some of us doesn't want to live there?
When Christian Missionaries told them of Hell being a lake of eternal fire the Inuits eagerly asked them how they could get there.
🤣🤣
Met some native Alaskans in Naknek workong up there, some of the most interesting people I’ve ever met