FACTOID #123: The five countries with the highest coffee consumption are also the five countries whose citizens trust one another the most. Coincidence? Probably.
Inupiat people continue to rely heavily on subsistence hunting and fishing, including whaling. The capture of a whale benefits each member of a community, as the animal is butchered and its meat and blubber allocated according to a traditional formula. Even city-dwelling relatives thousands of miles away are entitled to a share of each whale killed by the hunters of their ancestral village. Muktuk, the skin of bowhead and other whales, is rich in vitamins A and C and contributes to good health in a population with limited access to fruits and vegetables.
In recent years the exploitation of oil and other resources has been an important revenue source for the Inupiat. The Alaska Pipeline connects the Prudhoe Bay wells with the port of Valdez in south central Alaska.
There is a nearly-extinct branch of the Inupiat called Nunamiut, nomads that lived away from the coast and subsisted by hunting caribou and trading with the coastal Inupiat for other items. Most of these moved to the coast or other parts of Alaska when the caribou population collapsed between 1890 and 1910 and in the 1920s. Some of the remaining Nunamiut remained nomadic until the 1950s.
The Inupiaq language consists of Inuit-Inupiaq families of polysynthetic languages spoken from Siberia [Yup'ik] to Greenland[Inupiaq].
Further, many Inupiaqs have moved to major urban centers for a college education, warmer climate (arthritis concerns), health care needs, lower cost of living, due to AlaskaNative Claims Settlement Act in 1971 or the flow of oil moneys into the state.
Inupiaq values reciprocity, trading partnerships, all are based on what have become known today as subsistence hunting.
University of Cincinnati assistant professor Wendy Eisner and a team of researchers are studying the Inupiaq people of Alaska as part of a research project on global warming.
Wendy Eisner (geography and womenÂ’s studies), Chris Cuomo (philosophy and womenÂ’s studies) and Ken Hinkel (geography) were awarded a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to study climate and environment on AlaskaÂ’s North Slope.
The quality of the snow is a question of livelihood for the Inupiaq — a factor in their very existence.