Inuit

HOMES: Inuit live in Alaska and Canada. They had long, dark, very coldwinters and short, cool summers. Their permanent homes were called sod houses. They were made from driftwood and whalebone, and coered with sod. In winter camps, the Inuit build snowhouses from blocks of thick, hard-packed snow. Light came through a clear block of ice in the ceiling.The Inuit crawled into the snowhouses through a tunnel. In the spring, when their snowhouses melted, they moved into tents made out of wooden poles covered with caribou skins.
CLOTHING: They had to wear many layers of clothing because it was so cold. Their clothing was made from caribou skins and polar bear fur. They wore heavy mocassins on their feet.  
FOOD: They fished with spears and hunted with bows and arrows. They ate a lot of raw food. They hunted seals, walruses, caribou, polar bears, and whales. Hunters traveled on sleds pulled by powerful dogs called huskie.
ARTS AND CRAFTS: They made their own boats, tents, tools, clothing and weapons.  When the ice melted, they traveled in kayaks through the water.