Kangiryuatjagmiut

[1][2] The Kangiryuatjagmiut and the Kangiryuarmiut of Prince Albert Sound were the northernmost Copper Inuit.

Prior to white contact, and the introduction of schooners, the Kangiryuarmiut migrated mostly by foot, developing what Nuttall (1992) referred to as an "embodied memoryscape" in that people knew all place names en route, the accompanying stories, and a collective significance and relational understanding of locations.

According to Balanoff and Chambers, this knowledge is integral to social identity and Inuinnaqtun literacies.

This article relating to the Indigenous peoples of North America is a stub.

You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This Northwest Territories-related article is a stub.