Nunavut’s vast size and harsh climate enabled its sparse Inuit population to preserve their traditional nomadic lifestyle as hunters and fishers for centuries after Europeans settled in southern Canada. Nunavut’s Inuit have also managed to maintain their intricate carving skills, unique music, and Inuktitut language, the mother tongue of about 65 percent of Nunavut’s population.
History
Nunavut may have always been a vast land with a small population, but the Inuit have called the area home for at least 4,000 years. Originally whale hunters, the Inuit adopted their current seal and caribou hunting lifestyle about 500 years ago. The Nunatta Sunaqutangit Museum (Building Number 212, Iqaluit) is the best place to learn more about Inuit culture, especially on days when resident elders share firsthand stories.
Although some people believe the Viking explorers who briefly settled in northern Newfoundland made it as far north as Baffin Island around the year 1000, this has yet to be officially confirmed despite archeological discoveries of European artifacts at Cape Banfield in 2008. Nunavut’s first documented European visitor was English explorer Martin Frobisher, who believed he discovered gold ore near the bay which now bears his name during his 1576 Northwest Passage quest.
Robert Bylot, Henry Hudson, and William Baffin also ventured into the far north during the 16th century in an attempt to find the elusive Northwest Passage leading to Asia’s riches. However, no European would successfully sail across until Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen’s voyage between 1903 and 1905. Visitors can learn more about Amundsen and his relationship with the local Inuit at the Northwest Passage Trail (Gjoa Haven).
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