Sea ice fisherman checking the sea ice if it is safe, for article on Thule people Inuit

Thule people spread across the Arctic, giving rise to Inuit culture

Around 1000 C.E., a remarkable human expansion was already underway at the top of the world. A seafaring, dog-sledding, whale-hunting people — whom anthropologists call the Thule — were pushing eastward from the Bering Strait and western Alaska into some of the most demanding terrain any human society had ever inhabited. Within roughly a century, their descendants would reach Greenland. In doing so, they laid the cultural, linguistic, and technological foundations of what the world now knows as Inuit civilization.

Key facts about the Thule expansion

  • Thule people: Emerging from the Bering Strait region around 1000 C.E., the Thule spread eastward across the Arctic, eventually reaching Greenland by approximately 1100 C.E. — one of the most rapid cold-climate migrations in human history.
  • Inuit languages: The Thule carried with them the ancestral forms of the Inuit-Yupik-Unangan language family, a linguistic tradition that today spans from Siberia across Alaska, Canada, and Greenland — thousands of miles of continuous cultural heritage.
  • Dorset culture displacement: As the Thule moved east, they gradually displaced the Dorset people — called the Tuniit in Inuktitut — the last major Paleo-Eskimo culture, who had inhabited the Arctic for thousands of years before the Thule arrival.

Who the Thule were

The Thule were not a people who appeared from nowhere. They had split from the related Aleut group roughly 4,000 years before their great eastern expansion, and they descended from northeastern Siberian migrants who had crossed into Alaska in an earlier age. By the time they began their push across the Arctic around 1000 C.E., they had developed a sophisticated toolkit specifically engineered for life at the edge of survival.

They built large, well-insulated semi-subterranean homes from sod, bone, and stone. They hunted bowhead whales from kayaks and umiaks — large open boats — and used dog teams to travel across sea ice at speeds no previous Arctic culture had matched. These weren’t marginal adaptations. They were engineering solutions refined over generations, and they gave the Thule decisive advantages.

Researchers believe the Thule’s use of dogs as transport animals, combined with their larger and more versatile weaponry, helped them outcompete the Dorset people they encountered moving east. Inuit oral traditions remember the Tuniit as people of great physical strength — sometimes described as giants — but also as people who ultimately gave way.

Reaching Greenland

By around 1100 C.E., Thule migrants had settled in west Greenland. During the 12th century, they also established communities in east Greenland. This was a world already occupied. The Norse had settled Greenland centuries earlier, and the sagas record early encounters between Norse settlers and the people they called skrælingar — a catch-all term that likely included both the Tuniit and the early Thule.

These meetings were the first contact between Inuit ancestors and Europeans, and they were mostly brief and transactional. The lives of Paleo-Eskimo peoples in the far north were largely unaffected by Norse presence, except through mutual trade. The Norse colonies in Greenland eventually vanished, likely around the 15th century, in part due to the cooling brought by the Little Ice Age. The Thule-descended Inuit, by contrast, endured — though not without hardship.

Lasting impact

The Thule expansion produced one of the most culturally and geographically extensive Indigenous civilizations on Earth. Today, the peoples who descend from that 1000 C.E. expansion — Inuit in Canada, Kalaallit in Greenland, Iñupiat in Alaska — share related languages, kinship systems, and deep ecological knowledge of the Arctic that no other human tradition has developed to the same degree.

That knowledge is not merely historical. Inuit hunters and elders have documented multi-generational observations of sea ice, wildlife, and weather patterns that modern climate scientists are increasingly drawing on as a complement to instrumental records. The Thule’s mastery of Arctic survival became a living archive.

The Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, the national organization representing Canadian Inuit, continues to advocate for Inuit Nunangat — the Inuit homeland — as a recognized and protected political and cultural space. Greenlandic Inuit, known as Kalaallit, have achieved a degree of self-governance that makes Greenland one of the most significant examples of Indigenous political autonomy in the world. In 2009, Greenland gained expanded self-rule from Denmark, controlling most domestic affairs while remaining part of the Kingdom of Denmark.

The expansion that began around 1000 C.E. didn’t just populate a region. It produced cultures, languages, political identities, and ecological knowledge systems that remain vital — and vigorously defended — today.

Blindspots and limits

The story of Thule expansion is largely told through archaeology, genetics, and Inuit oral tradition — and those sources don’t always agree. A 2012 genetic analysis found no clear link between the Sadlermiut (long thought to be remnants of the Dorset culture) and the Dorset people themselves, complicating a narrative that had seemed settled. The fate of the Tuniit — whether they were displaced, absorbed, or both — remains genuinely unresolved.

It’s also worth holding in view what the Thule expansion cost the Dorset people. The Tuniit were thought to have gone extinct as a distinct culture by around 1400 or 1500 C.E., with the last community — the Sadlermiut of Southampton Island — surviving until 1902–1903, when exposure to European infectious diseases ended their existence as a people. The expansion that gave rise to Inuit civilization meant the end of another ancient Arctic tradition.

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For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Inuit

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