Differences and Similarities of the Haida and Inuit Introduction In this essay I will be talking about the differences and similarities of the Haida and the Inuit. I will also be talking about the challenges they had to face, and the universal cultures of the two. Also, the resources they had to get or use to survive. Challenges The challenges the Inuit and Haida had to face are very different. The Haida encountered sicknesses and diseases , when the europeans came over and were trading with them.The Haida had not had these illnesses before so they were not immune to them. The challenges that the Inuit had to face was being way too cold and dieing and getting frostbite from the
I have learned many interesting facts about the Inuit and the Blackfoot people. The Inuit and Blackfoot people had an interesting way of surviving. Both dressed differently, both had contact with the Europeans, and they hunted different animals to survive.
Imagine you have to find your own food and make your home and clothing with your bare hands and the bare essentials the environment provides. This is how our world’s Native Americans had to live including the Chinook and Nez Perce, but those two tribes both lived a bit differently. What factors are different? What are similar in the factors? How did they use the environment? The Chinook and Nez Perce tribes in the Northwest interacted with their environment differently and similarly to provide food, shelter and clothing for their people.risk
In these 5 paragraphs I will talk about the Inuit and Haida tribes.The second paragraph will talk about challenges they both face.The third will talk about resources they both have.The fourth will talk about the Universals of Culture such as shelter,tools,and clothing.
The Inuit tribe has used many natural resources in assisting them to provide food. As they hunt, many of their game don’t just provide food, yet more than that. The Inuit hunters have used sealskin and blubber, from seals they have caught, were used to make clothing, materials for boats, tents, harpoon lines, and fuel for heat and light. Their boats, harpoons lines, clothing, help them gather even more food.
How are the Inuit, Haida, and Iroquois alike? Well to start they all live in Canada! The Inuit live the Atlantic coast of Labrador in Canada. The Haida live in the West Coast of British Columbia in Canada. Last but not least, the Iroquois live Southwest and North Ontario in Canada! Second, they use the similar fishing tools. The Inuit use spears and kayaks. The Haida use spears, nets and traps. Last the Iroquois use spears, arrows and nets. So they all use spears to help them fish. Third, their art. All of the tribes use their are to communicate and also tell stories. Some use it to tell spirits or talk about spirits. Fourth, they all got interrupted by the Europeans. The Inuit is was a good thing cause they taught the Inuit new thing but they brought drug which is illegal to the Inuit. To the Haida it was bad cause they took/killed all the seals so the Haida couldn’t have seal. Last, to the Iroquois it was a good thing because they got to see new things. Fifth, their homes. They made their home after
The Inuit, Haida, and Sioux all very alike and different at the same time. One thing they all have in common is that they all live in Canada. The Inuit live in Nunavut and the Yukon Territory, the Haida people live on the Queen Charlotte Islands, and the Sioux live in Manitoba. They all do art, but different types of art, they also do it in different ways. The Haida did totem poles, the Sioux decorated tipis with paint, and the Inuit did carvings. The Sioux, Haida
There are many similarities and differences between Inuit, Eastern Woodlands Hunters, and Eastern Woodlands Farmers. They are different because they had different regions, environment, and history. They are have similarities like where in the world they lived and came from.
Haida architecture evolved from artistic necessity. As isolated island people they had few resources to trade. They relied on their reputation for artistic design and excellent craftsmanship amongst the mainland tribes to trade for the resources they needed. This research essay explores the culture, climate and material resources of the Haida Gwaii (Haida People) First Nation of British Columbia, Canada.
The people of Inuit, Yup’ik, Unangan, and other Native Americans Indians have lived in the harshest environment on Earth from Siberia, across Alaska and Canada, and to the East of Greenland along the coast of the Bering Sea and Arctic Ocean. From Labrador to the interior of Alaska the Athapaskan, Cree, Innu, and other Native’s people lived in the subarctic region of the land. These people had the ability to depend on their years of knowledge of the sky, ice, ocean, land, and animal behaviors in order to survive. Living in the area that was vast and dealing with seasonal dynamic extremes these Native people of the Artic and Subarctic had a honorable endurance for an millennia of exchanged goods, ceremonies, and shared feasts with neighboring goods that has help them throughout the years.
The Canadian Inuit were a domestic, tribal, egalitarian society in the 19th century. And some cultural changes occurred; making the Inuit adapt and become more aware of other resources they could get hold of, for gathering and hunting for food. In the 19th Century, the Europeans discovered the Inuit culture and this provided new resources for the Inuit to gain an easier way to gather and hunt for food. But because of the European influence, the Inuit’s culture changed to adapt with European Individuals living in their land, and European resources that had been made access to them. By this cultural change in the 19th century there was “an increased diversity in the social structure and material culture of the Labrador Inuit society” (Auger, 1993:27). The Labrador Inuit was a significant Inuit Society to have an ethnographical research made to understand a little bit more to; how the Inuit was affected and how the food process was changed. It will also be discussed the significant ideas and techniques that the Inuit used to gather and hunt for resources.
If you are wondering the difference and similarities of the Innu and the Inuit, then you have come to the right place. I have done research of the Innu and the Inuit and found they have some things in common and others not. I will be talking about those differences between the two tribes, and the similarities. Let's start with the similarities.
Although very similar, the Haida and the Inuit can also be vastly different. I want to point out the similarities and differences between the challenges faced, the resources available, and the universals of culture in each tribe.
Well they're not that different they eat the same thing, but another this is their art is very different they have different styles, but they do have something in common. I will talk about the difference of the Inuit, Haida, and the Iroquois. I will also be talking about the things they have in common.
The Inuit people are also known as Eskimos. They have lived in the Artic area; the Tundra, where the climate is cold and too severe for trees to grow, for over a thousand years. Over the thousands of years living in the Artic environment, the Inuit people have adapted culturally and biologically. Among the biological adaptations, their bodies altered permitting them to adapt to the environment in five ways. In addition to biological adaptations, the Inuit people also adapted culturally, changing how they dressed, the type of home they lived in, and the number of individuals in their groups.
When the Europeans first came into contact with the Inuits, they spread diseases which killed many of their kind. As time went by, outsiders changed the Inuits way of life (Santella 35). Airbases and radio stations built in the Arctic changed the Inuit’s nomadic way of life by influencing the creation of permanent settlements near these areas. The creation of schools and health care facilities were also very influential in the change of the Inuit culture (“Inuit Culture, Traditions, and History”). People from other countries had a major impact on the Inuits