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The Iñupiaq People of Barrow, Alaska - Exploratorium
The Iñupiaq, which translates into the “real people,” have been in Barrow, Alaska, for about 4,000 years. To survive in the harsh Arctic environment, the Iñupiaq developed a deep understanding of the area’s natural resources and how to make good use of them, and created a culture of cooperation and sharing.
Iñupiaq alphabet, pronunciation and language - Omniglot
Iñupiaq is an Eskimo-Aleut language spoken in northern and northwestern Alaska in the USA. In 2010 there were about 2,000 speakers of Iñupiaq, who are known as Inupiat. The language is also known as Inupiatun, Inupiaq, Inyupiaq, Inyupiat, Inyupeat, Inyupik or Inupik.
Iñupiat - Wikipedia
The Iñupiat (or Iñupiaq [2]) are a group of Indigenous Alaskans whose traditional territory roughly spans northeast from Norton Sound on the Bering Sea to the northernmost part of the Canada–United States border.
Collections :: The Iñupiaq People and Their Culture | Smithsonian ...
The Iñupiaq People and Their Culture. By Beverly Faye Hugo (Iñupiaq), 2009. Sea, Land, Rivers. There’s ice and snow, the ocean and darkness – darkness in the winter and twenty-four hours of daylight in the summer. Barrow was originally called Utqiaġvik (meaning, “the place where ukpik, the snowy owl, nests”).
Indigenous Languages of Alaska: Iñupiaq - U.S. National Park Service
Iñupiaq is part of a spectrum or dialect chain of other Inuit languages in the Arctic—languages that are geographic neighbors have more similarities than those languages that are farther apart. The Inuit-speaking world covers a vast stretch of land from Alaska, to Canada, to Greenland.
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