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  2. Nanook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanook

    In Inuit religion, Nanook (/ ˈ n æ n uː k /; Inuktitut: ᓇᓄᖅ [1], [2] lit. "polar bear") was the master of bears, meaning he decided if hunters deserved success in finding and hunting bears and punished violations of taboos. [3] The word was popularized by Nanook of the North, the first feature-length documentary. [citation needed]

  3. Inughuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inughuit

    The Inughuit (also spelled Inuhuit), or the Smith Sound Inuit, historically Arctic Highlanders or Polar Eskimos, are an ethnic subgroup of the Greenlandic Inuit. They are the northernmost group of Inuit and the northernmost people in North America, living in Greenland. Inughuit make up about 1% of the population of Greenland. [2]

  4. Inuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit

    Inuit have traditionally been fishermen and hunters. They still hunt whales (esp. bowhead whale), seal, (esp. ringed seal, harp seal, common seal, bearded seal), polar bears, muskoxen, caribou, birds, and fish and at times other less commonly eaten animals such as the Arctic fox.

  5. Trouble in Arctic town as polar bears and people face warming ...

    www.aol.com/news/trouble-arctic-town-polar-bears...

    The polar bear alert team's vehicles are gathering outside, trying to move a bear away from town. "If climate change continues," muses Tee's classmate Charlie, "the polar bears might just stop ...

  6. Inuit religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_religion

    This enabled Inuit to borrow the powers or characteristics of an anirniq by taking its name. Furthermore, the spirits of a single class of thing — be it sea mammals, polar bears, or plants — are in some sense held to be the same and can be invoked through a keeper or master who is connected with that class of thing. In some cases, it is the ...

  7. Inuit culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_culture

    The Inuit are an indigenous people of the Arctic and subarctic regions of North America (parts of Alaska, Canada, and Greenland).The ancestors of the present-day Inuit are culturally related to Iñupiat (northern Alaska), and Yupik (Siberia and western Alaska), [1] and the Aleut who live in the Aleutian Islands of Siberia and Alaska.

  8. Polar bear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polar_bear

    Polar bears have also been filmed for cinema. An Inuit polar bear hunt was shot for the 1932 documentary Igloo, while the 1974 film The White Dawn filmed a simulated stabbing of a trained bear for a scene. In the film The Big Show (1961), two characters are killed by a circus polar bear. The scenes were shot using animal trainers instead of the ...

  9. Inuit cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_cuisine

    Inuit hunters most often hunt juvenile whales which, compared to adults, are safer to hunt and have tastier skin. Ringed seal and bearded seal are the most crucial aspect of an Inuit diet and is often the largest part of an Inuk hunter's diet. [3] Land mammals such as reindeer (caribou), polar bear, and muskox; Birds and their eggs