Athropolis HOME | Maps | Arctic Links | Arctic Library |
Arctic Archaeologists Uncover the Past Archaeologists in the Arctic are faced with a number of unique challenges - it’s an incredibly vast region, areas are difficult to get to, there's a short season to explore, and excavations often have to be made into permanently frozen ground (permafrost). Those obstacles, combined with the fact that the Inuit had no written language or record, have kept much of the history of Arctic habitation a mystery - until recently. Archaeological evidence has revealed that the Arctic region of the North American continent has seen some of the most fascinating human adaptations anywhere. Remains of ancient settlements show that Arctic peoples have subsisted for thousands of years on the resources of land and sea - surviving and prospering under some of the harshest conditions on Earth. PICTURES: Top: The remains of an ancient Inuit settlement. Right: Ivory doll.
Click pictures for more information and credits. Library: INUIT HISTORY: Paleo-Eskimo Period: 3000-5000 years ago. Dorset Period: 1000-3000 years ago. Thule ("Toolee") Period: 300-1000 years ago. Historical Period: Present-300 years ago. Arctic, Inuit Links: Arctic, Archaeology, Inuit Guide to Arctic Sunrise & Sunset Arctic Maps & Weather Reports |
DICTIONARY: Just "double-click" any unlinked word on this page for the definition from Merriam-Webster's Student Electronic Dictionary at Word Central. |
|
ARCTIC LIBRARY & GLOSSARY: Check this section for an index of the rest of the things you really need to know about the Arctic. |
|
ARCTIC MAPS & WEATHER REPORTS: Maps of the Northwest Passage, explorers' routes, iceberg sources, Nunavut, the Arctic by treeline, temperature... |
|
ARCTIC LINKS: Even more information! Links to sites related to the Arctic and "Iceberg: the Story of the Throps and the Squallhoots". |
|
GUIDE TO ARCTIC SUNRISE & SUNSET: How much sunlight or darkness is there in the Arctic on each day of the year? |