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DOMESTIC LIFE: THE IGLU
DOMESTIC LIFETHE IGLU  | CLOTHING
  Building an Iglu | Inside an Iglu
Snow knives
The iglu is made of snowblocks 0.9-1.2 m (3 to 4 feet) in length, 0.6 m (2 feet) in height, and 15-20 cm (6 to 8 inches) in thickness.

Two men worked together — one cutting the snow blocks, the other putting them together. Blocks of snow were cut from snowbanks with bone or ivory knives that had a slight curve to the blade. Following the introduction of metal to the Arctic, the Inuit made snow knives with single-edged steel blades.

The preferred snow for the construction of a snowhouse was from a bank formed by a single snowstorm. Blocks taken from snowbanks formed over a series of storms tended to break easily.

The first row of blocks is laid out in a circle and then slanted to form a spiral line. The beginning of the second row butts up to the last block of the first row and each block is given a slight incline toward the inside of the house.

As the blocks are placed around the spiral, they are given greater angles, thus creating the dome. Snowhouses built for long term habitation were approximately 3.7 m (12 feet) high and 4.5 m (15 feet) in diameter.

Iglu sculpture, 939.46.19.B / HC4136
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Iglu
Sculpture made of ivory, bone, metal, skin, glass
From Fort Ross, Somerset Island
Dating to 1937-1939
Gift of L. A. Learmonth
HC4136

Immediately over the entrance, as seen in this sculpture, a hole for a window is cut in the snow wall and covered with the sewn casings of seal intestine.
 

 

 
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