why don't the Inuits make permanent settlements
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Inuits do not make permanent settlements due to cold temperatures.
- The Inuit have typically lived in the harshest of conditions for millennia. For their hunting quest, they were aware of the unpredictable weather patterns that typically allowed them to fly safely on the sea ice.
- The hunters had encountered increasingly erratic weather all over Greenland.
- The colder climate and a subsequent reduction in animals naturally meant that, in search of local quarry, they typically forced to promptly flee their winter settlements.
- The hunters thus, built more interim winter shelters than permanent settlements in their newly nomadic way of life.
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