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         Greenland Culture:     more books (21)
  1. From Middle ages to Colonial times: archaeological and ethnohistorical studies of the Thule culture in Southwest Greenland, 1300-1800 A.D.: An article from: Arctic
  2. THE PALEO-ESKIMO CULTURES OF GREENLAND: NEW PERSPECTIVES IN GREENLANDIC ARCHAEOLOGY.(Review): An article from: Arctic by Callum Thomson, Jane Sproull Thomson, 2001-06-01
  3. Nipisat - A Saqqaq Culture Site in Sisimiut, Central West Greenland.(Book review): An article from: Arctic by John C. Erwin, 2007-06-01
  4. A Strategic Profile of Greenland, 2000 edition (Strategic Planning Series) by The Greenland Research Group, The Greenland Research Group, 2000-04-25
  5. Ethnography of the Egedesminde District: With Aspects of the General Culture of West Greenland (Communal Societies in America) by Kaj Birket-Smith, 1976-01
  6. Perspectives on Female Sex Offending: a Culture of Denial.(Book Review): An article from: The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality by Cyril Greenland, 2003-09-22
  7. Greenland's 25 years of indigenous self-rule.(Culture): An article from: Arena Magazine by Peter Jull, 2004-08-01
  8. The spatial organization of the marine hunting culture in the Upernavik District, Greenland (Bamberger Wirtschaftsgeographische Arbeiten) by Albert A Haller, 1986
  9. Greenland culture by Frederik Nielsen, 1952
  10. Studies on the material culture of the Eskimo in west Greenland (Arbejder fra den Danske arktiske station paa Disko) by Morten P Porsild, 1915
  11. Under four flags: Aspects of recent culture change among the Eskimos of Greenland, Canada, Alaska, and Siberia by Charles C Hughes, 1963
  12. Paleo-Eskimo cultures in Disko Bugt, West Greenland (Meddelelser om Grønland) by Helge Eyvin Larsen, 1958
  13. Animal bones from Itivnera, West Greenland: A reindeer hunting site of the Sarqaq Culture (Meddelelser om Grønland) by Ulrik Møhl, 1972
  14. Nipisat: a Saqqaq Culture Site in Sisimiut, Central West Greenland

81. Project: Clothing And Identity : Continuity And Change In East Greenland Materia
Project Clothing and identity continuity and change in East greenland materialculture A85000 culture, philosophy of life and leisure activities
http://www.onderzoekinformatie.nl/en/oi/nod/onderzoek/OND1257140/toon
Login English KNAW Research Information NOD - Dutch Research Database ... Research entire www.onderzoekinformatie.nl site fuzzy match
Project: Clothing and identity : continuity and change in East Greenland material culture
Print View Titel Clothing and identity : continuity and change in East Greenland material culture Abstract This research project has the aim to shed light on forms of identity, which are expressed by the clothing of East Greenland and how the development of clothing in East Greenland gives insight in the development of identity in this region. Period Status completed Dissertation Yes Related organisations
Related persons
Classification
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Last modified: 19-11-2003 00:00

82. Eskimo
One of the most striking aspects of traditional Eskimo culture is its relative Extensive intermarriage occurred between greenland Eskimo and Danes,
http://www.alaskan.com/docs/eskimo.html
Eskimo
The Eskimo are the native inhabitants of the seacoasts of the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions of North America and the northeastern tip of Siberia. Their habitation area extends over four countries: the United States, Canada, the USSR, and Greenland. Of the more than 90,000 Eskimo in this region, the greater part live south of the Arctic Circle, with approximately 28,000 on the Aleutian Islands and in Alaska; 17,000 in Canada; 1,500 in Siberia; and 45,000 in Greenland. The word Eskimo is not an Eskimo word. It means "eaters of raw meat" and was used by the Algonquin Indians of eastern Canada for these hardy neighbors who wore animal-skin clothing and were adept hunters. The name became commonly employed by European explorers and now is generally used, even by Eskimo. Their own term for themselves is Inuit (the Yupik variant is Yuit), which means the "real people." The Eskimo inhabit one of the most inclement regions of the world. Their land is mostly tundralow, flat, treeless plains where the ground remains permanently frozen except for a few inches of the surface during the brief summer season. Although some groups are settled on rivers and depend on fishing, and others follow inland caribou herds, most Eskimo traditionally have lived primarily as hunters of maritime mammals (seals, walrus, and whales), and the structure and ethos of their culture have always been fundamentally oriented to the sea. One of the most striking aspects of traditional Eskimo culture is its relative homogeneity across more than 8,000 km (5,000 mi) of the vast expanses of the Arctic. The main institutional and psychological patterns of the culturereligious, social, and economicare much the same. There are some differences in traditional kinship systems, however, especially in the western regions, and the language is divided into two major dialectical groups, the Inupik speakers (Greenland to western Alaska) and the Yupik speakers (southwestern Alaska and Siberia).

83. Arctic Culture
The culture of the first people to reach northeastern greenland and the HighArctic is called Independence I by archaeologists, named after the fjord on
http://www.quarkexpeditions.com/arctic/culture.shtml

About The Arctic

Voyages

Preparation

Exploration
...
The Environment

The Culture
Wildlife

Expedition Logs

Further Reading

It was a memorable trip. We learned a lot about a culture we knew little of before. Thank you. ARCTIC CULTURE Cultures of the North The people native to the coastal regions of Labrador, Greenland, The Northwest Territories, Alaska and northeastern Siberia, have many cultural traits in common that differ from those of adjacent Indian tribes. The word "Eskimo" comes from eskipot, an Algonquian word meaning "an eater of raw flesh." Some Eskimos feel this attribution puts them in a poor light with modern audiences and prefer to use other terms. The most widely used is "Inuit" which really refers specifically to the Eskimos of the eastern Canadian Arctic. In the Bering Sea region, Eskimos prefer to be called "Yup'ik," while the North Slope Alaska Eskimos prefer "Inupiat" and Mackenzie Delta Eskimos prefer "Inuvialuit." (The word "Eskimo" will be used occasionally to refer to all native Arctic people.) Arctic languages, although having root similarities, are mutually unintelligible. For example, Yuit is spoken in northeastern Siberia, Yupik on coastal Alaska south of Norton Sound, Aleut in the Aleutians (a very ancient linguistic split from the others,) and Inupik from the middle of Norton Sound, north and east across Arctic Canada to Greenland and Labrador. The latter is geographically one of the largest language distributions in the world with only dialectic differences between northern Alaska and Greenland.

84. Land Of The Viking Gods: Sagas, Legends And Myths Of The White Nights
Along the way, the Inuit people of seldomvisited greenland, Discover theunique Sami culture, including a visit to the renowned Sami Museum,
http://www.uwalumni.com/travel/2006/whitenights.html

Travel
Lifelong Learning UW Libraries Resources On Wisconsin ... UW-MADISON
Land of the Viking Gods: Sagas, Legends and Myths of the White Nights - July 1-15, 2006
A truly unique expedition, this extraordinary 15-day program offers the comfort, safety and convenience of our own private aircraft for much of the journey. World-renowned scholars and a professional staff accompany you, ensuring an enriching and rewarding experience. Destinations include:
  • Sami Culture of Finnish Lapland Wooden Cathedrals of Kizhi, Russia Treasures of St. Petersburg Medieval Tallinn, Estonia Helsinki, Finland
Learn While You Explore Paul V. Kollman, CSC (PhD Chicago) will share his insights into the religions, shamanism, and spiritual icons of Northern Europe and Russia. He is assistant professor of the history of Christianity at the Department of Theology at the University of Notre Dame, with special interests in African Christianity and mission history. He has taught at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago and the Philosophy Centre in Jinja, Uganda. A fellow of the Kellogg Institute for International Studies, the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, and the Nanovic Institute for European Studies, he has received fellowships from the Erasmus Institute and the Lilly Endowment for Theological Education. He is also president of the Midwest Fellowship of Professors of Mission and book review editor for the journal Mission Studies.

85. Prehistoric Inuit Cultures
of the PreDorset culture in Southwestern greenland lasted until about 500 BC Northern Ellesmere Island and the north coast of greenland were also
http://www.usask.ca/education/ideas/tplan/sslp/pre.htm
PREHISTORIC INUIT CULTURES
Don C. Barnett
People have inhabited the Arctic for thousands of generations. Who was the first people of the Arctic? Where were they located? What were they like? First, read the following information and locate these areas on a map. Second, design a time line to illustrate Inuit prehistory. Third, conclude that the migration of peoples across the Arctic has been continuous for many centuries. Evidence of these early people has been found in the tools, dishware, and weapons left behind. You may wonder why archaeologists and anthropologists are quite sure of the age of the different tools and weapons found that were used by people so long ago. A method called radio carbon dating is used to determine the age of ancient tools and weapons. This dating is accurate to between 100 and 200 years of the actual age of the objects. Archaeologists believe that the earliest people migrated to North America from Siberia. The Siberia North America connection was given further credence with the 1996 discovery of early stone tools near the Upstar river, north of Magada, a city in Siberia. These tools were the same as those found in parts of the Alaskan and Canadian Arctic. (Even from ancient times, we have been a land of immigrants!) Most archaeologists believe that the earliest people migrated over the Bering Land Bridge before rising sea levels covered the land about 11,000 years ago. Check the map to find these waters called the Bering Strait. When did the first people come to North America? The answer to this question is uncertain.

86. GREENLAND - Discussions And About This Country, Culture, Travel, Etc...
Discussions and about this country, culture, travel, etc
http://www.phrasebase.com/archive/phrasebase_greenland.html
Home Chat Archive Translations Countries Languages Links
Return to the Archive Index Forward to the Current GREENLAND Forum GREENLAND - Discussions and about this country, culture, travel, etc... Author Date Qaagitsi! - Freja 14th Nov 2004 ata takoriassagit - Freja 15th Nov 2004 inuk kiserliortoq - Freja 16th Nov 2004 apivoq! - aput, nittaallat.. Freja 19th Nov 2004 iluameerputit - Freja 9th Dec 2004 juullip unnukkuutaa - kalaallisooq Freja 24th Dec 2004 Birthday - inuuvik Freja 15th Jan 2005
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87. Tasiilaq Ammassalik EAST GREENLAND
language and culture of the region compared to the rest of greenland. in the special East greenland dialect and the original culture has not been
http://www.scantours.com/ammassalik_EAST_GREENLAND.htm
Home Country Links Site Map Rail Passes ... E-MAIL Scandinavian travel specialist since 1967
GREENLAND
TASIILAQ *
AMMASSALIK)
FROM ICELAND
The town of Tasiilaq in Greenland – two hours from Reykjavik by air EAST GREENLAND
3 days
Jun – Sep * Tasiilaq is the new name of the town Ammassalik
EAST GREENLAND
The far north town of Ittoqqortoormiit (Scoresbysund) and the National Park are not often visited by tourists. In fact, there is no admission to the National Park except for the locals and the town has now only 550 inhabitants and few services. The main tourist areas in East Greenland are the town of Ammassalik (Tasiilaq) and the nearby village of Kulusuk where the airport is located. Kulusuk is a very popular one-day excursion for tourists visiting Iceland due to its proximity. The tours we offer to East Greenland start and end in Reykjavik, Iceland. In 2004, for East Greenland we offer 4-day tours with a combination of Ammassalik and Kulusuk, 3- day tours to Tasiilaq and 2-day tours to Kulusuk. We also offer the one-day excursion to Kulusuk allowing a visit to Greenland without ever checking out of your hotel in Reykjavik. There are many local excursions to choose from in East Greenland. Please see the list following the tour. These excursions can only be ordered and paid for during your stay and operate based on weather and capacity restrictions. Your “Destination Guides” are on hand to assist you at your hotel with information on the excursions.

88. GREENLAND TOUR KULUSUK FROM ICELAND 2 DAYS
language and culture of the region compared to the rest of greenland.The mythical inspiration derived from its traditional culture is expressed clearly
http://www.scantours.com/KULUSUK_FROM_ICELAND_2_DAYS.htm
Home Country Links Site Map Rail Passes ... E-MAIL Scandinavian travel specialist since 1967
KULUSUK FROM ICELAND
The village of Kulusuk in Greenland – two hours from Reykjavik by air EAST GREENLAND - 2 days
Daily (except Sat/Sun)
Jun – Sep EAST GREENLAND The far north town of Ittoqqortoormiit (Scoresbysund) and the National Park are not often visited by tourists. In fact, there is no admission to the National Park except for the locals and the town has now only 550 inhabitants and few services. The main tourist areas in East Greenland are the town of Ammassalik (Tasiilaq) and the nearby village of Kulusuk where the airport is located. Kulusuk is a very popular one-day excursion for tourists visiting Iceland due to its proximity. The tours we offer to East Greenland start and end in Reykjavik, Iceland. In 2004, for East Greenland we offer 4-day tours with a combination of Ammassalik and Kulusuk, 3-day tours to Ammassalik and 2-day tours to Kulusuk. We also offer the one-day excursion to Kulusuk allowing a visit to Greenland without ever checking out of your hotel in Reykjavik. There are many local excursions to choose from in East Greenland. Please see the list following the tour. These excursions can only be ordered and paid for during your stay and operate based on weather and capacity restrictions. Your “Destination Guides” are on hand to assist you at your hotel with information on the excursions.

89. Arctic Sunrise - Greenpeace Member Blog
So the fate of the hunting culture in greenland has always been tied to the ice,and now that ice is disappearing. It is normal for Arctic sea ice to melt
http://members.greenpeace.org/gpblog/index.php?blog=662

90. Clothing From East Greenland - RMV
Clothing from East greenland IX. Bibliography In Continuity and Discontinuityin the Inuit culture of greenland. Groningen University of Groningen.
http://www.rmv.nl/publicaties/2groenland/e/e9.html
Clothing from East Greenland IX. Bibliography
Bibliography Some of the sources consulted which are of interest here: Barnes, Ruth and Joanne B. Eicher (eds.)
1991 Dress and Gender, Making and Meaning. Providence / Oxford.
Barthes, R.
1983 The fashion system. (Transl. M. Ward, R. Howard. Original 1967). New York.
Birket-Srnith, K.
1948 Eskimoerne. Rhodos.
Buijs, Cunera
1994 Kleding van Oost-Groenland in ontwikkeling. Yumtzilob 5,4: 315-352.
1999 Developments in Clothing and Identity in Greenland. In: Jarich Oosten en Cornelius Remie (eds.), Arctic Identities, Continuity and Change in Inuit and Saami Societies. Leiden: Research School CNWS, School of Asian, African and Amerindian Studies. CNWS Publications. pp. 145-173.
Buijs, C. and G.M. Vogelsang-Eastwood 1993 Patterns for: Arctic Clothing. Textile Research Centre: Leiden. Buijs, Cunera and Jarich Oosten (eds.) 1997 Braving the Cold, Continuity and Change in Arctic Clothing. Leiden: Research School CNWS. Driscolle, B. 1980 The Inuit amautik. I Like my hood to be Jull. Winnipeq.

91. U.S. Outlines Results Of Partnership With Greenland, Denmark - US Department Of
Bringing greenland s Unique culture to the US The National Museum of NaturalHistory at the Smithsonian Institution is hosting the biggest greenland
http://usinfo.state.gov/eur/Archive/2005/May/24-399307.html
Advanced Search/Archive You Are In: USINFO Regions Europe and Eurasia
New U.S. Partnership with Greenland and Denmark
Washington hosted second meeting of Joint Committee May 18-20
In connection with the second meeting of the U.S.-Denmark-Greenland Joint Committee May 18-20 in Washington, the U.S. Department of State issued a fact sheet outlining the results achieved by the partnership of the United States, Greenland and Denmark since the signing of new agreements by the three governments in 2004. Following is the fact sheet: U.S. Department of State
Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs
Washington, D.C.
May 24, 2005 FACT SHEET
THE NEW PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND GREENLAND AND DENMARK The United States and Denmark, including the Home Rule Government of Greenland, signed agreements in Igaliku, Greenland on August 6, 2004, that set up a Joint Committee to broaden and deepen cooperation between the United States and Greenland. The Joint Committee promotes concrete cooperation on a wide range of scientific, environmental, economic, commercial, and educational areas. Representatives of the three parties first met in the capital of Greenland, Nuuk, October 5-6, 2004. Since then, cooperation has advanced considerably and is already producing significant results with programs, projects, and partnerships across many agencies. Washington hosted the second meeting of the Joint Committee May 18-20, 2005, delivering on the Igaliku agreements. In this ongoing process, Denmark will host the next meeting of the Joint Committee in Copenhagen in the first half of 2006. Some illustrative examples of results include the following:

92. Civilization.ca - Canada's Visual History - The Arctic - A.D. 1000 - 1600
The archaeological remains of these migrant whalers were first found near Thulein northern greenland, hence the appellation Thule culture.
http://www.civilization.ca/cmc/archeo/cvh/arctic/earc9.htm
QUICK LINKS Home page Archaeological Survey Museum of Civilization Archaeology Civilizations First Peoples History Scholars Educators Artifact catalogue Library catalogue Boutique
Thule Culture ( figure
A.D. 1000 - 1600
Sometime around A.D. 1000, the whalers of North Alaska began to move eastward, probably travelling by umiak and bringing with them most of the elements of the sophisticated sea-hunting culture that had developed in Alaska over the previous millennium ( figure figure Thule villages are spread throughout the coastal areas of arctic Canada. After the first, apparently rapid, movement across the Arctic, Thule people began to penetrate other areas where whales were not available but other resources could be found. On Victoria Island and the adjacent mainland, for example, we find evidence of Thule people who seem to have subsisted primarily on seals, caribou and fish. In the region around Igloolik, they must have soon discovered the immense walrus resources of the area and built villages in good walrus-hunting localities. Even in those areas where whaling was clearly a very successful activity, Thule villages contain large numbers of bones of seals, walrus, caribou and other animals. One concludes that they were diversified hunters who utilized their technology to fully exploit the surrounding environment ( figure ). Yet the number of whales they killed suggests that much of their food and fuel must have continued to come from that source (

93. IPY: International Polar Year
Social Dynamics of Material culture in the Arctic (1)The Challenges of Social in East greenland (Change in Art and Material culture of East greenland)
http://www.ipy.org/development/eoi/details.php?id=7

94. Greenland Guide @ Nationalgeographic.com
People and culture Erik the Red, founder of greenland’s first European settlement,selected the name “greenland” to make Icelandic colonists think the land
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/traveler/archive/2000-07-5-0.html
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95. Aboriginal Subsistence
The Inuit Circumpolar Conference, 1992; Whaling A Part of Our culture. Kaj Egede,Minister of Fisheries, greenland. The Inuit Circumpolar Conference, 1992
http://www.highnorth.no/Library/Culture/cont-cul.htm
Aboriginal Subsistence / Culture
Click the article you wish to read:

96. Whaling - A Part Of Our Culture
Whaling is part of our culture and history. Like other forms of hunting, greenland is part of the international community also when it comes to
http://www.highnorth.no/Library/Hunts/Other/wh-a-pa.htm
Source : Inuit Whaling, Inuit Whaling - a Inuit Circumpolar Conference Publication, June 1992, June 1992, Special Issue
Author: Kaj Egede, Minister of Fisheries, Greenland
Whaling - a Part of our Culture
    Whaling is part of our culture and history. Like other forms of hunting, whaling is an important part of our present-day life, and for us is both a symbol and a living reality. But whaling has now become a symbol for many people in the western world. The whales have become a symbol of how human beings should treat living resources. This led to the so-called "moratorium" which meant a five-year total ban on all commercial whaling. During those five years extensive biological survey were carried out which showed that a number of whale stocks are far more plentiful than was believed just a few years ago. Nevertheless, strong economic and political forces are working to extend the whaling moratorium. In certain circles, the whaling issue has become a matter of ethics. If this attitude becomes widespread it can become a problem for Greenland. Greenland is part of the international community - also when it comes to whaling. So we must cooperate and negotiate with other countries and peoples, even if we disagree with them in their view of whaling.

97. Greenland:@:Culture_and_Conduct_or_Local_Customs - Tourist Information And Trave
culture and Conduct or Local Customs. New from template culture and Conduct orLocal Customs, Help File. global urlstack is empty wginfo=
http://secure.hospitalityclub.org/hc/travel_information.php?wgInfo=Greenland:@:C

98. Arctic: [Fifty Years Of Arctic Research: Anthropological Studies From Greenland
Do these represent distinct cultures, regional variants of one culture, Describing finds from the recent NEWland Project in Northeast greenland,
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3712/is_199906/ai_n8868395
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ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports [Fifty years of Arctic research: anthropological studies from Greenland to Siberia] Arctic Jun 1999 by LeMoine, Genevieve M Gullov, Hans C Gilberg, R
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Fifty Years of Arctic Research presents papers by scholars working across the Arctic, gathered to mark the retirement of Jorgen Meldgaard from a career of more than 50 years in Arctic archaeology. The papers honor both the long tradition of Arctic research in the National Museum of Denmark's Department of Ethnography in general and Meldgaard's remarkable contribution in particular. As is to be expected in such a volume, the papers vary widely in both scope and content, reflecting the broad influence of Meldgaard's long career. Taken together, they depict a discipline that has grown a great deal in 50 years but still presents some fundamental questions for researchers. Given the inspiration of this volume, it is not surprising that memoirs have a prominent place. The editors' introduction begins by summarizing Meldgaard's career, from his first appearance in the Department of Ethnography in 1945 until his retirement in 1997. Included in the introduction, although not listed in the table of contents, are two birthday tributes, one from George Qulaut, Commissioner of the Nunavut Implementation Commission, and one from Greenlandic artist Jens Rosing. Similar brief notes, editorials, and picture essays are scattered throughout the text. Old friends Klaus Ferdinand and Hans-Georg Bandi also contributed memoirs. Both shed light not only on Meldgaard's research, but on him as a person as well.

99. LocalPin - Society And Culture In Greenland
Society and culture in greenlandrelated links from LocalPin. Find links toSociety and culture in greenland in our geographically-organised
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OX2K DXpedition 2000 A five day event, a radio amateur DXpedition with the objective to make as many worldwide ham contacts, as possible, by moonbounce, communicating via a 32 meter VHF dish from Kangerlussuaq. http://www.qsl.net/ox2k/

100. Dmoz.fr Regional North America Greenland Society And Culture
Regional North America greenland Society and culture Regional North Americagreenland Society and culture - Open Directory Project dmoz.fr.
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Regional North America Greenland Society and Culture
Dmoz.fr Annuaire Francophone Regional North America Greenland Society and Culture : Regional North America Greenland Society and Culture L'Open Directory Project est un et un annuaire francophone Version Fran§aise de Dmoz, annuaire francophone international
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  • Greenland - A personal description of travels to Greenland with details about ice core drilling, NGRIP and The 109th Airlift Group.
  • Greenland - A Modern Society - Gives information and links to Greenland's government, its people and cultures, language and literature, Kalaallit Nunaata Radio, and natural resources.
  • Greenland Resources - Greenland Archaeology links and resources from about.com.

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