All Object Lessons
Knowledge & Navigation

The Inuit Kayak: A Boat Made for One Person and the Cold Sea

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 science, geography, history, art, ethics
Core question How did one of the world's greatest small boats develop in one of its hardest places — and what does the kayak teach us about engineering by people who do not call it engineering?
An Inuit man in a traditional kayak. Behind this simple-looking boat are thousands of years of careful design — and one of the most successful pieces of human engineering for cold seas anywhere on Earth. Photo: Brocken Inaglory / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
Introduction

In the Arctic seas — around Greenland, Alaska, the Canadian north, and parts of Russia — the water can kill a person in minutes. The temperature is often near or below freezing. The waves can be sudden and rough. The shore can be far away. Yet for at least 4,000 years, Inuit and related peoples have hunted on these waters in small boats they built themselves. The boat is the kayak. It is one of the most successful pieces of human engineering anywhere. The Inuit kayak is long, narrow, and low to the water. It is built around the body of one person. The hunter sits inside, with their legs under the deck, sealed off from the cold sea by a fitted skin cover. From inside, the hunter can paddle for many kilometres, hunt seals and whales, and roll the boat upright if it tips over without ever leaving it. Behind the simple shape is a careful design refined by thousands of generations of Inuit boat-makers, working with materials they found in the Arctic — driftwood, whalebone, sealskin. They had no metal. They had no factories. They built one of the world's best small boats anyway. This lesson asks how the kayak works, who made it, and what it teaches us about engineering done quietly, generation after generation, by people whose knowledge is rarely called science.

The object
Origin
The Arctic — what is now Greenland, the Canadian north, Alaska, and the eastern coast of Russia. Made by Inuit and related peoples (including Yup'ik and Aleut). The Inuit name for the boat is qajaq.
Period
At least 4,000 years and probably much longer. Still made and used today.
Made of
A frame of driftwood or whalebone, lashed together with sinew or root fibre. The frame is then covered with seal skins, sewn together with waterproof stitches and stretched tight.
Size
Most are 4 to 5 metres long but only 50 to 60 cm wide. Each kayak is built to fit its owner — the seat hole, the foot space, and the deck height all match the person.
Number of objects
Tens of thousands have been made over the centuries. Today, traditional kayaks are made and used by Inuit communities, while modern recreational kayaks have spread the basic design to millions of people worldwide.
Where it is now
Used today across the Arctic — in Greenland (Kalaallit Nunaat), Nunavut, the Northwest Territories, Alaska, and Chukotka. Historical kayaks are in the National Museum of Greenland, the Smithsonian, and many other museums around the world.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Most students think 'kayak' means a plastic recreational boat. The original is a piece of Indigenous Arctic engineering. How will you put the Inuit at the centre of the lesson, where they belong?
  2. The Arctic is changing fast because of climate change. Inuit traditional knowledge is now being recognised as part of how we understand and respond. How will you connect the past to the present?
  3. Inuit communities today face many pressures — colonisation, language loss, climate change. How will you teach with respect for both the heritage and the current reality?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine a sea where the water is just above freezing. Falling in without protection can kill you in minutes. The shore is many kilometres away. You need to hunt seals or whales to feed your family. What kind of boat do you build?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

This is the problem the Inuit solved. The kayak's design answers each part of it. The shape is long and narrow — fast through the water, easy to paddle alone. The seat is sealed — a fitted skin cover, called a tuiliq, attaches around the paddler's waist, so even if a wave breaks over the boat, no water gets in. The boat is low to the water — less wind resistance, less likely to tip in a side wave. The bottom is curved so the kayak can carve through ice slush. The skin cover is waterproof. Most importantly, the boat can be rolled. If a wave tips the kayak over, the paddler — sealed inside — can flip back upright with a sweep of the paddle. They never leave the boat. They never enter the water. This is called the Eskimo roll, and it has saved many lives. Each part of the design answers a specific Arctic problem. The Inuit refined it over thousands of years, by experiment and tradition. Students should see that 'design' is not just done by engineers in offices. It is done by anyone who solves real problems carefully, over time, with what they have. The Inuit are some of the greatest designers in human history.

2
A traditional Inuit kayak frame is built without any metal. The pieces of wood — driftwood that has floated to the Arctic from forested rivers far to the south — are joined by lashings of sinew or root fibre. Each joint is wrapped tightly. The frame can flex slightly as the boat moves through waves, which makes it stronger, not weaker. Over this frame, sealskins are stretched tight. The skins are sewn with waterproof stitches by Inuit women, who are the makers of the boat covering. A typical kayak uses six or seven seal skins. Why might a flexible frame be stronger than a rigid one?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the sea is not rigid. Waves push and pull. A rigid frame fights against the sea — and eventually breaks. A flexible frame moves with it — and survives. This is the same principle used in modern aircraft wings, which are designed to flex slightly. The Inuit boat-builders worked it out without engineering schools. There is also another reason: driftwood pieces are not always the same size or shape. A flexible lashed frame can be made from whatever pieces of wood arrive on the shore. A rigid frame would need uniform pieces. The lashings are themselves a piece of clever engineering — sinew is one of the strongest natural fibres, and when wet it tightens, making the joints stronger when the boat is in use. The kayak also shows how knowledge is shared. Men typically built the frames; women made and sewed the skin covers. Both jobs required years of careful learning. The kayak is not a one-person invention. It is a community technology, made by many hands, tested by every winter.

3
The English word 'kayak' comes from the Inuit word qajaq. The Inuit have given the world many words: kayak, anorak, parka, igloo, mukluk, husky. These words travelled south as the technologies they describe travelled with them. In the 20th century, Western inventors began making kayaks from canvas, then plastic, then fibreglass. Today, recreational kayaking is a global sport, with millions of people paddling kayaks on rivers, lakes, and sea coasts. The basic design — the shape, the cockpit, the spray cover, the rolling technique — comes from the Inuit. Has the modern world treated this gift well?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

A mixed answer. On one hand, the kayak has spread widely and is now part of life in many countries. The basic Inuit design has been improved in some ways — modern materials are lighter, repairs are easier, the shape has been refined for sport. On the other hand, the original makers — the Inuit — have not always benefited from this spread. Most kayak-makers today are not Inuit. Most kayak buyers do not know where the design came from. Inuit communities continue to face many of the problems left by colonisation: language loss, mental health crises, fewer hunting opportunities, the impacts of climate change on Arctic ice. The kayak is one of many Indigenous Arctic gifts to the world that has been taken without much credit or compensation. Some Inuit master boat-builders today are working to keep the traditional craft alive — building real skin-on-frame kayaks, teaching young Inuit, sharing the knowledge that has nearly been lost in some places. Their work matters. Students should see that the gift of the kayak has been received broadly but not always carefully. The same is true of many other things from many other cultures.

4
The Arctic is the part of the world warming fastest because of climate change. Sea ice that was once thick all year is now thinner and breaks up earlier. Ancient hunting routes are no longer safe. Wildlife — seals, narwhals, bears — are moving in unpredictable ways. The traditional knowledge of Inuit hunters, built over thousands of years, is being challenged by an environment that is changing faster than at any time in living memory. What does this mean for the kayak?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several things, all connected. The kayak itself still works — its design has not been outdated by climate change. But the world the kayak was designed for is changing. Hunters who know how to read the ice are facing ice that does not behave the way it used to. Some Inuit communities are still hunting; some are buying food at stores; many are doing both. Climate scientists are now actively working with Inuit elders, recognising that the elders' detailed long-term knowledge of Arctic conditions is more accurate than any 50-year-old scientific record. This is a quiet shift: science learning from a tradition that science once dismissed. The kayak is part of this larger story. The makers of the kayak are still here. They have a great deal to teach the rest of us — about cold seas, about boats, about patience, about living well with hard conditions. End the discovery here. The Arctic is not a museum. It is a living, changing place, full of living, working people, with one of the world's most remarkable boats in their hands.

What this object teaches

The Inuit kayak (qajaq) is a long, narrow, sealed boat designed for hunting in cold Arctic waters. It has been made by Inuit and related Arctic peoples for at least 4,000 years. The boat is built around the paddler — the seat fits exactly, and a fitted skin cover seals the cockpit so no water gets in even if a wave breaks over the deck. The traditional kayak has a frame of driftwood or whalebone, lashed together with sinew, covered with sewn sealskins. There is no metal. The boat is light, fast, and remarkably stable. If it tips over, the paddler can roll it back upright without leaving the seat — the famous Eskimo roll, which has saved many lives. The English word 'kayak' comes from the Inuit word. Modern recreational kayaks, made of plastic and fibreglass, are based on this Inuit design. The kayak is one of the world's greatest pieces of small-boat engineering, developed not in workshops but in coastal Arctic camps, by hunters and seamstresses working with what the land and sea provided. The Inuit are alive today and still make kayaks, while also facing the rapid changes of the climate-changing Arctic.

QuestionWhat many people assumeWhat is actually true
Where does the kayak come from?Modern Western inventorsInuit and related Arctic peoples — at least 4,000 years ago
Is the design simple?Yes — it is just a narrow boatIt is a refined piece of engineering — flexible frame, sealed cover, rollable, perfectly fitted to the paddler
What is it made of?Plastic or fibreglassTraditionally driftwood or whalebone, lashed with sinew, covered in sewn sealskins. No metal.
Who made each kayak?One personSeveral. Men typically built the frames; women made and sewed the skin covers. The boat was built by the community, for one paddler.
Are the Inuit still here?They were wiped outThey are alive today, with their own communities, languages, and (in some places) self-government. They still make kayaks.
Key words
Kayak (qajaq)
A long, narrow, sealed boat for one or sometimes two paddlers, used for hunting and travel on cold Arctic waters. The Inuit name is qajaq.
Example: A traditional Inuit kayak is about 5 metres long, 55 cm wide, and built to fit one specific paddler. The seat hole is the size of the paddler's hips.
Inuit
The Indigenous peoples of the Arctic regions of Greenland, Canada, Alaska, and parts of Russia. The word means 'the people' in Inuktitut.
Example: There are about 180,000 Inuit today. They have their own languages (including Inuktitut and Kalaallisut), their own art and music, and in some places their own self-government.
Tuiliq
A waterproof skin coat that attaches around the cockpit of a kayak, sealing the paddler inside so that no water gets in. Made of seal gut or sealskin.
Example: With a tuiliq sealed at the waist and around the cockpit, an Inuit hunter can roll the kayak upside down and back, with no water entering the boat.
Eskimo roll
A technique for righting an upturned kayak without leaving the seat. The paddler uses the paddle and a hip movement to flip the boat back up. Essential for survival in cold Arctic waters.
Example: A skilled paddler can perform an Eskimo roll in under two seconds. Some Inuit hunters trained themselves to roll dozens of times in a row.
Driftwood
Wood that has floated on the sea, often for hundreds of kilometres. In the treeless Arctic, driftwood is the main source of building wood, including for kayak frames.
Example: Greenland Inuit collected driftwood that had floated north from Siberian rivers, sometimes travelling thousands of kilometres before arriving on Greenlandic beaches.
Sealskin
The waterproof, durable skin of seals, used by Inuit for clothing, boots, and the covering of kayaks. The skins are carefully cleaned, treated, and sewn with waterproof stitches.
Example: A typical kayak uses six or seven sealskins for its covering. The skins are sewn together by women using a special waterproof stitch that does not let water through.
Use this in other subjects
  • Geography: On a world map, find the Arctic Circle. Mark Greenland, the Canadian Arctic, Alaska, and Chukotka — the regions where Inuit and related peoples live. Discuss what daily life is like at these latitudes — the long winter darkness, the summer days that never end, the importance of the sea for food.
  • Science: Discuss what happens to a human body in cold water. Hypothermia can kill in minutes when water is near freezing. The kayak's sealed design keeps the paddler dry — the most important survival rule in cold water. Try a simple class experiment: put one hand in cold water and one in warm water for 30 seconds. Which felt longer? Now imagine your whole body.
  • History: Build a class timeline of Arctic peoples: the Thule culture (ancestors of modern Inuit, from about 1000 CE), European arrival in Greenland (10th century by Norse, then renewed contact from the 1500s), the European whaling era (1600s-1800s), modern Inuit self-government (Greenland from 1979, Nunavut Territory in Canada from 1999). The kayak runs through all of this, mostly unchanged.
  • Mathematics: A traditional Inuit kayak is built using the paddler's body as the measuring tool — three forearm-lengths from the seat to the bow, two hand-spans for the cockpit width, and so on. Each kayak fits one person. Try measuring something using only body parts — your foot, your hand-span, your forearm. The result is a custom-fit object, by hand, without rulers.
  • Citizenship: Indigenous knowledge — including Inuit knowledge of Arctic ice and weather — is increasingly recognised by climate scientists. Discuss how this kind of knowledge has been undervalued in the past, and what changes when it is taken seriously now.
  • Art: Each student designs a small boat to fit themselves — drawing it on paper, with their measurements next to each part. The Inuit kayak is built this way: every boat is unique to its paddler. Discuss what changes about a tool when it is made for one person, not mass-produced.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The kayak is a modern Western invention.

Right

The kayak was developed by Inuit and related peoples at least 4,000 years ago. The English word comes from the Inuit word qajaq. Modern recreational kayaks are based on the Inuit design.

Why

This is one of the most common wrong stories. Many people who paddle kayaks do not know where the design came from.

Wrong

The kayak is just a simple narrow boat.

Right

It is a carefully refined piece of Arctic engineering — flexible frame, sealed cover, rollable, perfectly fitted to the paddler. Each part of the design answers a specific cold-sea problem.

Why

'Simple' is what we say about other people's technology when we have not looked closely. The Inuit kayak is one of the most sophisticated small boats ever made.

Wrong

'Eskimo' is the right word for these peoples.

Right

'Inuit' is the term they use for themselves in Canada and Greenland. 'Yup'ik' is used by another related people in Alaska and Russia. 'Eskimo' is an older word, sometimes seen as offensive in Canada though still used in some Alaskan contexts. When in doubt, use the people's own name.

Why

Naming matters. Using a community's own term shows respect.

Wrong

The Inuit are gone or only in museums.

Right

There are about 180,000 Inuit today, in Greenland, the Canadian Arctic, Alaska, and Russia. They have their own languages, communities, and (in places like Greenland and Nunavut) their own self-government. They still make kayaks.

Why

Older textbooks often used the past tense for Indigenous peoples. The truth is a present tense.

Teaching this with care

This lesson is about a living Indigenous Arctic people. Treat them that way. Use 'Inuit' rather than 'Eskimo' as the default term — 'Inuit' is what most communities in Canada and Greenland prefer. In Alaska and parts of Russia, 'Yup'ik' or other terms may be more accurate; both 'Inuit' and 'Eskimo' are sometimes used, with debates about which is appropriate. When in doubt, refer to the specific people. Use the Inuit word qajaq alongside the English 'kayak'. Do not call Inuit cultures 'primitive' or 'simple'; the kayak is sophisticated engineering, and the Inuit have lived skillfully in one of Earth's harshest environments for thousands of years. Be honest about colonisation and its effects — language loss, mental health crises, climate change pressures — but do not present Inuit only as victims. They are also designers, hunters, leaders, and scientists today. Avoid romanticising 'simple' Arctic life — it is hard, technical, and skilled work. Be careful when discussing seal hunting, which some students may find difficult; for Inuit, it is the basis of food, clothing, and culture, and modern animal welfare debates have caused real harm to Inuit livelihoods. Stick to the facts: kayaks were used to hunt seals, the seals provided everything the community needed, this is the Arctic food web. If you have Inuit students or students with Arctic Indigenous connections, give them space to share if they want, but do not put them on the spot. Finally, end the lesson on the present tense. The kayak was made then. It is still made now. The makers are still here.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Inuit kayak.

  1. What is an Inuit kayak, and what is it for?

    It is a long, narrow, sealed boat for one paddler, used by Inuit and related Arctic peoples for hunting seals, whales, and other sea creatures. It has been used for at least 4,000 years.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the boat's shape, its single-paddler design, and its hunting use.
  2. How does the kayak's design solve the problems of cold Arctic seas?

    The boat is long and narrow for speed, low to the water for stability, and built around the paddler. A sealed skin cover keeps water out even when waves break over the deck. If the kayak tips over, the paddler can roll it back upright without leaving the seat.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention more than one design feature. Any two of: shape, sealed cover, rolling ability — earn full marks.
  3. What is a traditional Inuit kayak made of?

    A frame of driftwood or whalebone, lashed together with sinew or root fibre, covered with sewn sealskins. No metal is used in the traditional design.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the frame, the lashing, and the sealskin covering. Specific materials are a bonus.
  4. Why did men and women both have important roles in making a kayak?

    Men typically built the wooden frames. Women made and sewed the sealskin covers using waterproof stitches. Both jobs required years of careful learning. The kayak was a community technology, made by many hands.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both roles and recognise that the boat needed both skills. Either is enough for partial credit.
  5. Why is it wrong to think of the kayak as a modern Western invention?

    The kayak was developed by Inuit and related peoples at least 4,000 years ago. The English word comes from the Inuit word qajaq. Modern recreational kayaks are based on the Inuit design.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the Inuit origin and the long history. The word qajaq is a bonus.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The Inuit gave the world the kayak, but the original makers are not always credited. Are there other things in your life where you do not know the original makers?

    This is a useful question that connects the lesson to many other objects. Students may suggest: numbers (Indian/Arabic), pasta (China/Italy), chocolate (Mesoamerica), the alphabet (ancient Phoenicia), pyjamas (India), shampoo (India). Strong answers will see that many everyday things came from one culture and spread to others, often with the original makers forgotten or uncredited. The kayak is one example among many. End by saying that knowing where things come from is part of how we show respect.
  2. Inuit knowledge of Arctic ice and weather is now being recognised by climate scientists. Why might science have ignored this knowledge for so long?

    This is a deeper question about how knowledge gets valued. Students may suggest: bias against Indigenous peoples, language barriers, the assumption that 'real' knowledge has to come from universities, the colonial history that dismissed local knowledge. Strong answers will see that 'science' and 'traditional knowledge' have often been treated as opposites, when in fact they can be partners. The Inuit have been observing the Arctic for thousands of years. That is a longer dataset than any scientific record. End by saying that this kind of partnership is now growing.
  3. If you could spend one day with an Inuit kayak-maker, what would you want to learn?

    This is a creative, personal question. Students may say things like: how to read the ice, how to roll the boat, how to pick the right driftwood, how to live with the cold, what the silence of the Arctic sounds like. The deeper point is that craftspeople are also teachers, and that a day with a master maker can change how someone sees the world. Some Inuit boat-builders do offer workshops; the option of really learning from them is real.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'You need to hunt seals in water that can kill you in minutes. The shore is far away. You have no metal, no factory, no plastic. What kind of boat do you build?' Take guesses. Then say: 'About 4,000 years ago, the Inuit solved this problem. They built one of the most successful boats in human history. It is called the kayak.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the Inuit kayak: a long, narrow, sealed boat, made of a wooden or bone frame covered with sewn sealskins. Built to fit one paddler. The cockpit seals around the paddler's waist with a skin cover. If the boat tips over, the paddler can roll it back upright without leaving the seat. Pause and ask: 'Why might one boat be built to fit one person, like clothing?' Listen to answers. They will lead naturally into the ideas of careful design and individual fit.
  3. UNDO THE WRONG STORIES (15 min)
    On the board, write three statements: (1) The kayak is a modern Western invention. (2) The kayak is just a simple narrow boat. (3) The Inuit are gone. Take each in turn. Replace each with what we now know — the kayak is at least 4,000 years old and Inuit-designed; it is a refined piece of engineering; the Inuit are alive today, with about 180,000 people, their own languages, and their own communities. End by asking: 'Why do these wrong stories spread?'
  4. THE CUSTOM FIT ACTIVITY (10 min)
    Each student measures themselves using their own body parts — three forearm-lengths from finger-tip to elbow, the width of their hips, the height of their knee from the floor. They sketch a kayak that would fit them, with these measurements written next to each part. Discuss: this is how Inuit kayak-makers built their boats. Each one was unique. Most modern boats are mass-produced — one size for many bodies. The Inuit way was different.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What might a 4,000-year-old design teach us today?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'The Inuit kayak is one of the world's quietest masterpieces. It was made by people working with what they had, in some of the hardest conditions on Earth. It still works. The makers are still here. When you next see someone in a plastic kayak on a calm river, remember the dark cold sea, the seal-skin cover, and the thousands of years of careful work that made the boat possible.'
Classroom materials
Body-Part Measuring
Instructions: Each student measures something in the classroom using only their own body — feet, hand-spans, forearms, finger widths. They write down their measurements. Then they compare with classmates. The same object will have different measurements for different people. Discuss: this is how Inuit kayak-makers worked. Each kayak was made for one specific person, using that person's body as the ruler. The result was a perfect fit. Modern factories cannot do this.
Example: In Mr Avingaq's class, students measured the door of the classroom. One student got 'four forearms and two hands wide'. Another got 'three forearms and three hands wide'. The teacher said: 'You both measured the same door. You both got useful answers. Each answer is correct for the body that did the measuring. Now imagine making something — a coat, a kayak, a shoe — that fits your body exactly. That is what the Inuit did. Every kayak was a custom fit.'
The Cold Test
Instructions: In a controlled, safe way: each student dips one hand into a basin of ice water (water with a few ice cubes) and one hand into a basin of warm water. They count how long they can keep each hand in. The cold hand will be uncomfortable in 10-20 seconds. Discuss: imagine your whole body in water that cold. Without protection, hypothermia can kill in minutes. The kayak's sealed cockpit and the tuiliq (skin coat) keep the paddler completely dry. This is not luxury — it is survival.
Example: In Mrs Saila's class, most students could only keep their hand in the ice water for about 20 seconds. The teacher said: 'Now imagine being thrown into water this cold, far from shore, in a small boat. The Inuit faced this every time they hunted. Their kayak's design — sealed cockpit, fitted skin cover, ability to roll — meant they could fall over and come back up dry. Every part of the design is a piece of survival engineering.'
Words That Travelled
Instructions: On the board, write five words: kayak, anorak, parka, igloo, husky. Tell the class that all of these words came from Inuit languages and travelled south with the things they describe. Each student picks one and finds out (or guesses) what it originally meant. Discuss: when objects travel between cultures, the words often travel with them. The Inuit gave many gifts to the world. The words are one record.
Example: In Mr Iqaluit's class, students learned that 'anorak' comes from the Greenlandic word annoraaq, that 'igloo' comes from iglu (meaning 'house', not just snow house), and that 'husky' comes from a word for the people themselves before being applied to the dogs they bred. The teacher said: 'Every time someone in Italy says 'kayak', they are using an Inuit word — without always knowing it. Words carry their origins, even when the speakers do not. Now you can hear the Inuit in your own language.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the wampum belt for another Indigenous North American technology that has often been misunderstood. The two complement each other.
  • Try a lesson on the boomerang for another Indigenous-made tool whose careful design is often called 'simple' by outsiders.
  • Try a lesson on the Polynesian voyaging canoe (if you choose to add it) for another extraordinary piece of Indigenous boat-building.
  • Connect this lesson to science class with a longer project on cold-water survival, hypothermia, and the engineering of safety equipment.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a discussion of climate change and Indigenous knowledge. Inuit elders are now working with climate scientists in real partnerships.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on objects designed for one person — clothing, instruments, sports equipment. The custom fit changes everything.
Key takeaways
  • The Inuit kayak (qajaq) is a long, narrow, sealed boat designed for hunting in cold Arctic waters. It has been made by Inuit and related peoples for at least 4,000 years.
  • Each traditional kayak is built to fit one specific paddler — like a piece of clothing. The seat, the cockpit, and the deck height all match the person.
  • The boat is built from a flexible wooden or bone frame, lashed with sinew, covered with sewn sealskins. No metal is used. A sealed skin cover keeps the paddler completely dry.
  • If the kayak tips over, the paddler can roll it back upright without leaving the seat. This is called the Eskimo roll, and it has saved many lives in cold Arctic waters.
  • The English word 'kayak' comes from the Inuit word qajaq. Modern recreational kayaks, made of plastic and fibreglass, are based on the Inuit design — but the original makers are not always credited.
  • The Inuit are alive today. They still make kayaks. Their knowledge of Arctic ice and weather is now being recognised by climate scientists as part of how we understand a rapidly changing Arctic.
Sources
  • Building the Greenland Kayak — Christopher Cunningham (2003) [academic]
  • The Aleutian Kayak — George Dyson (1986) [book]
  • Inuit Knowledge and Climate Change — BBC News (2020) [news]
  • Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami (national Inuit organisation in Canada) — ITK (2024) [institution]
  • Greenland National Museum: Kayak collection — Nunatta Katersugaasivia Allagaateqarfialu (2024) [museum]