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  2. Inuit cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_cuisine

    The high costs of hunting equipment—snowmobiles, rifles, sleds, camping gear, gasoline, and oil—is also causing a decline in families who hunt for their meals. [10] An Inuk hunter skinning a ringed seal. Seal: Depending on the season, Inuit hunt for different types of seal: harp seal, harbour seal, and bearded seal.

  3. Aboriginal whaling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aboriginal_whaling

    Inuit subsistence whaling, 2007. A beluga whale is flensed for its maktaaq (skin), an important source of vitamin C. [1]Aboriginal whaling or indigenous whaling is the hunting of whales by indigenous peoples recognised by either IWC (International Whaling Commission) or the hunting is considered as part of indigenous activity by the country. [2]

  4. Inuit culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_culture

    Hunting provided the Inuit with a balanced diet and the raw materials for clothing, housing, household implements and heating, boat and sled-building, hunting weapons, toys, and art-objects. Stones, carefully chosen and carved, were used for select but important objects: arrow, spear, and harpoon heads, hide-scrapers, and knives.

  5. Seal hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seal_hunting

    Greenlandic Inuit hunt and eat both ringed and harp seals. Protests surrounding the southern seal hunt in Canada have historically impacted Canadian and Greenlandic Inuit. [147] Because of the impact of protest, profits surrounding the Inuit hunting of ringed seal fall with any ban on any type of seal product, regardless of exemption.

  6. Reindeer hunting in Greenland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reindeer_hunting_in_Greenland

    Hunting has always been an extremely important aspect of the Greenland Inuit culture: "The Inuit culture is the most pure hunting culture in existence. Having adapted to the extreme living conditions in the High Arctic of the North American continent for at least four thousand years, Inuit are not even hunter-gatherers. Inuit are hunters, pure ...

  7. Subsistence hunting of the bowhead whale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsistence_hunting_of_the...

    Iñupiat Family from Noatak, Alaska, 1929. Subsistence hunting of the bowhead whale is permitted by the International Whaling Commission, under limited conditions.While whaling is banned in most parts of the world, some of the Native peoples of North America, including the Inuit and Iñupiat peoples in Alaska, [1] continue to hunt the Bowhead whale.

  8. Angry Inuk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angry_Inuk

    Angry Inuk is a 2016 Canadian Inuit-themed feature-length documentary film written and directed by Alethea Arnaquq-Baril that defends the Inuit seal hunt, as the hunt is a vital means for Inuit to sustain themselves.

  9. Inuit weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_weapons

    Inuit weapons were primarily hunting tools which served a dual purpose as weapons, whether against other Inuit groups or against their traditional enemies, the Chipewyan, Tłı̨chǫ (Dogrib), Dene, and Cree. [1] Six Inuit bows displayed at the Museum of Anthropology in Vancouver