Last migration to Greenland Etah lies on the ancient migration route from the north of the Canadian Arctic with several waves of ancient migrants passing through the area from the northbound
Independence I and
Independence II cultures 4,400 and 2,700 years ago, respectively, to the southbound
Thule culture migrants less than a thousand years ago. It is also the point where the last migration of the Inuit from
Baffin Island reached the coast of Greenland in 1865. An Inuk
shaman () named Qidlaq led the migrants from Baffin Island alongside the coast of Ellesmere Island for seven years, crossing the strait to Etah. The group split there, with some returning to
Pond Inlet in Canada at a cost of many lives. Inhabitants of
Pituffik, later relocated to
Qaanaaq, are partially descended from this last group of Arctic migrants to Greenland.
20th century Etah was used in the past as a base camp for several Arctic expeditions, including
Knud Rasmussen's expeditions to the northern coast of Greenland,
Robert Peary's failed attempts at the North Pole, the ill-fated
Crocker Land Expedition of 1913, the Humphrey Expedition of 1934–35, the
MacGregor Arctic Expedition in 1937–38, and the Haig Thomas Expedition of 1938. Descendants of Peary and the local Inuit still live in Qaanaaq. Etah was once the most-northerly populated settlement in the world, while
Annoatok, located approximately to the north, was only a seasonally-occupied hunting camp. The village was abandoned with the Inuit moving south to Pituffik due to the harsh climate. In 1984, a group of Greenlanders from Qaanaaq moved to Etah in an attempt to repopulate the village. The attempt failed, with the hunters unable to support themselves and their families with income from animal hides, as well as their inability to sever connections with the settled life and the amenities of Qaanaaq. The huts of the former village are still standing. Today, Etah is seldom visited except by occasional hunter visitors in the summertime because of an abundance of
walruses and
polar bears. ==References==