Thousands of years ago peoples from Asia travelied over a land bridge linking northem Asia and Alaska. Some of these people Populated the far north America and ware the ancestors of the Canadian Inuit people. Predecessors of The Inuit traversed much of the 3.3 million square kilometres through some of the most inhospitable landscape and climate on the face of Earth, For over six thousand, years, their people survived under extreme conditions of cold, darkness, hunger and isolation, a heroic effort requiring strength, ingenuity and perseverance. Inuit sculpture reflects all aspects of their life from birth to death, from joy to sorrow, from the shaman and his spirit helper to the legendary creatures customarily transmitted to future generations through oraltradilion. The cotent becomes fascinaling as your own body of knowledge and understanding of their culture expands. The Inuit led a nomadic life moving between hunting and fishing grounds following the seasons and their prey. They lived in igloos in the winter and skin tents in the summer. They faced a barren land of extreme hostility where starvation and death from elements are constant companions. The Inuit could only possess what they could carry on their backs or on their sledges. The low productivity of the arctic ensured sparse population densities and hence a society composed of small, constantly moving family groups. They did not require complex social or governing hierarchies not could they have developed written or symbolic forms of memory. They relied entirely on their own memories and voices to pass on spiritual and temporal traditions. The oldest Inuits art was left recemblance to oldest culture of Korea, It is same group of species. North of the Arctic Cirle the snow underfoot is rock hard. A foot stamped upon it leaves no impression on to wind soulptured surlace. Sculpture is in the mountains which rise behind the bays and inlets along the rugged coasts of Baffin island, sculpture which cha