European explorers often thought of the Arctic as an empty wasteland, and the Indigenous people who lived there as childlike. But as one historian put it, “the real children in the Arctic would be the white explorers.” From Martin Frobisher’s expeditions in the 16th century right up until Robert Peary’s time, Inuit people helped explorers in countless ways—from providing food, to teaching valuable skills, to saving their lives. In this episode, we’ll learn how Indigenous people viewed the Europeans and Americans in their lands, why they chose to assist in their expeditions, and how explorers often exploited them in their quests for the North Pole.
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02/05/21 • 47 min
Mental Floss Presents: The Quest for the North Pole - Inuit and the Explorers
Transcript
The Quest for the North Pole is a production of I Heart Radio and Mental Floss. It's August eighteen and two British naval ships are dodging icebergs in Baffin Bay on their mission to find the Northwest Passage. John Ross commanding HMS Isabella, and William Perry in the h M s Alexander are farther north along the western Greenland coast than any previous explorers. They assume this land of glaciers and stark mountains is uninhabited, but they're
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