The summer tents that the Inuit people lived in were called tipis. A tipi is a cone-shaped house. The women were responsible for building the tipi. Often the tipi was built near water so they could easily fish and hunt water animals. The women would begin to build the tipi with at least twelve long poles that they would stand up in a cone shape and tie them together at the top. Once the poles were secured, the women covered the poles with caribou skins. The doorway of a tipi would face the rising sun in the east. They would make a fireplace in the middle of the tipi. The smoke of the fire would escape through the hole at the top of the tipi. Tipis were easily moved. It didn't take the women long to take down and set up a tipi. …show more content…
A tupiq looked very similar to the shape of a tent. If wood was not found the Inuit people would use whalebone or antlers that they had tried to straighten. The back of the tupiq resembled a tipi. That was where the family slept. The front of the tupiq was covered in thin strips of skin so that light could enter. The tent was secured to the ground by heavy