Cultural Adaptations to Environmental Conditions in the Arctic North
The first human occupation of the Americas occurred in Berengia during the last glaciation of the region. Later, it was more widely accepted that the primary center of population expansion was in Alaska, subsequently spreading into the Canadian Arctic and Greenland. The physical environment of the populated regions influenced the developing cultures of each group, affected by access to resources, barriers to trade routes, and weather and land conditions. As a result of environmental impact, religion, technological adaptations, economy and food source acquirement varied among the cultural populations, and is still seen in ethnic societies of the Arctic region today, evidence of the cultural sustainability of such adapted groups.
To define "culture," it is the combination of values, practices, and relationships of a population, with a number of factors influencing its development. Considering environment as a key point to cultural development requires the consideration of its subfactors and outcomes, as demonstrated by examining societies environmentally diverse from one another. It is important to first point out that indigenous cultures directly interplay with the region in which they exist. For instance, they are concerned with the aspects of nature concerned with their ability to survive, such as the local flora, fauna, and weather. They also tend to reach out to the spiritual experience of nature, paying attention to celestial orientation and the ecological connections among species. Their perspective of nature influences their development of religious practices, food gathering or hunting techniques, and food resources, critical elements of their cultural identification.
Hunting...
" (Monaghan & Just, 2000, p. 49) An extreme example of cultural relativity and the possible moral issues that it might raise, is the practice of female circumcision in many East African societies. From a western cultural perspective, this practice is ethically and morally unacceptable. However, when considered form the vantage point of the societies in question and their specific cultural norms and values, the practice takes on another dimension. It is
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