The Lapps and the Eskimos are blends of Andonite and Sangik-blue races. [1]
They are descendants of Foxhall peoples. The Foxhall peoples were farthest west and succeeded in retaining much of the Andonic culture; they also preserved their knowledge of flintworking, which they transmitted to their descendants, the ancient ancestors of the Eskimos. [2]
Eskimos are sole survivors of Urantia aborigines. Early Andonites more nearly resembled the present-day Eskimo than any other type of living human beings. [3] About five thousand years ago a chance meeting occurred between an Indian tribe and a lone Eskimo group on the southeastern shores of Hudson Bay. [4]
The ancients always sacrificed the mother’s interests for the welfare of the child; an Eskimo mother even yet licks her baby in lieu of washing. [5]
Eskimo children thrive on so little discipline and correction simply because they are naturally docile little animals; the children of both the red and the yellow men are almost equally tractable. [6] The Eskimos of today still leave the penalty for a crime, even for murder, to be decreed and administered by the family wronged. [7] The Eskimos and early Andonites seldom were cannibalistic except in times of famine. [8]
The Eskimos believe that man has three parts: body, soul, and name. [9] The Eskimos still believe that the soul stays with the body three days. [10] The Eskimos still conceive that everything in nature has a spirit. [11]
The Andonites were early taught the golden rule, and, even today, their Eskimo descendants live very much by that code; custom is strong among them, and they are fairly free from violent antagonisms. [12]
The comparatively recent Eskimos and Amerinds had very meager concepts of God; they believed in ghosts and had an indefinite idea of survival of some sort after death. [13]