Around 200 C.E. — or rather, 200 B.C.E. — along the wind-scoured coastlines of what is now Alaska, something remarkable was beginning. A cluster of related cultures, later grouped by archaeologists under the name the Thule Tradition, started developing the tools, boats, and social structures that would one day carry their descendants across the entire Arctic world. These were the deep ancestors of every modern Inuit and Yupik person alive today.
What the evidence shows
- Thule Tradition: The tradition is traced to roughly 200 B.C.E., with its precursor stages — Old Bering Sea, Punuk, and Birnirk — developing along the Bering Strait before a recognizable Thule culture expanded east across Arctic Canada around 1000 C.E.
- Kayaks and umiaks: These skin-covered watercraft appear in the archaeological record for the first time during this tradition, enabling sea-mammal hunting at a scale and range not seen before in the Arctic.
- Harpoon technology: Innovations in harpoon design — including mounted ice picks, ivory floats, and line mouthpieces — allowed hunters to pursue and recover bowhead whales, the largest animals in the Arctic.
A world built on ice and sea
The Bering Strait coastline in 200 B.C.E. was one of the most demanding environments humans had ever tried to inhabit year-round. The Thule Tradition’s early peoples, beginning with the Old Bering Sea stage, met that challenge with extraordinary ingenuity.
Their tool kits included polished-slate lanceolate knives, ulu transverse blades, snow goggles carved from bone, and needles fine enough for watertight stitching. They made crude pottery, worked antler and walrus ivory, and decorated their tools with curvilinear dots, circles, and lines that gave each object a distinctive artistic identity.
They depended heavily on seal and walrus for food, fuel, and materials. But the most ambitious target was the bowhead whale — an animal that could weigh 100 tons and feed an entire community through an Arctic winter.
Punuk whalers and the rise of open-sea hunting
The Punuk stage, which followed the Old Bering Sea stage, pushed whaling further into the open ocean. Hunters paddled umiaks — large, skin-covered open boats — into narrow ice leads and across open water in the fall, killing whales in coordinated team efforts that required skilled leadership and the cooperation of multiple crews.
The whale boat captain, called the umialik, became one of the most respected roles in Arctic society. That title still carries weight in Alaskan Arctic communities in the 21st century C.E. — a living thread connecting the present to the Thule Tradition’s earliest days.
Punuk settlements were larger and more permanent than earlier camps. Their subterranean, rectangular homes, framed by whale jawbones and insulated with skins, sod, and snow, were nearly invisible from the outside — a design as practical as it was elegant.
The Birnirk stage and the path toward Thule proper
The Birnirk stage, centered along coastal northern and western Alaska, was more austere. Almost no decorative art appears in the record. But the technology kept evolving: harpoon head styles shifted across three phases, and the basic sled design that would later be pulled by dog teams was already in use.
A 2019 C.E. genetic analysis added another dimension to the story. It found that between 2,700 and 4,900 years ago, the ancestors of the Thule emerged in Alaska through admixture between Paleo-Eskimo peoples and the Ocean Bay Tradition. Those ancestors then migrated back to Siberia, where they became the Old Bering Sea culture, before eventually returning to Alaska. The deep origins of the Thule are not a straight line — they are a story of movement, mixing, and return.
Lasting impact
By around 1000 C.E., the Thule culture proper expanded rapidly eastward across northern Canada, reaching Greenland by the 13th century C.E. In doing so, they absorbed or replaced the earlier Dorset culture — a people who had themselves inhabited the region for thousands of years.
Every modern Inuit and Yupik person descends from the Thule. Their languages, their knowledge of ice and sea, their relationships with the land, and many of their technologies trace directly back to the tradition that began along the Bering Strait around 200 B.C.E. The kayak — now used recreationally by millions of people worldwide — entered human history here. So did the foundational techniques of Arctic survival that allowed human communities to thrive at the top of the world.
The Thule also came into contact with Norse explorers arriving from Greenland in the 11th century C.E. Viking sources called them the Skrælingjar. Evidence suggests both the Thule and the Dorset had real, if complex, encounters with these European arrivals — making the Bering Strait tradition part of the story of first contact across the Atlantic world as well.
Blindspots and limits
The Dorset culture, which the Thule displaced over several centuries, has its own sophisticated history spanning thousands of years — and its fate remains one of archaeology’s open questions. Whether the Dorset were absorbed, competed out, or simply declined in the face of climate and demographic pressure is not fully resolved. The record of the Thule Tradition was also largely systematized by European and Danish expeditions in the early 20th century C.E., filtered through the frameworks and assumptions of that era. Indigenous scholars and communities continue to add nuance and correction to that picture.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Thule people
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights recognized for 160 million hectares at COP30
- Ghana establishes marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
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