Ann Fienup-Riordan, Willie Hensley, and Katie Ringsmuth share insights on how to connect, research, and uncover Alaska's past. Their individual interests, projects, approaches, and challenges researching Alaska will be highlighted. Katie Ringsmuth: National Park Service historian (UAA History Department); Ann Fienup-Riordan: anthropologist, author, and oral historian; Willie Hensley: Inupiaq activist, leader, author (UAA College of Business)
The Iñupiat communities of Point Barrow, Alaska can trace their lineage back to some of the earliest...
During the 1800s, the Russian American Company conscripted native Alaskan workers to engage in fishi...
In recent years anthropologists have begun to reflect more upon their obligations to the communitie...
Special guests Sven Haakanson, Alvin Amason, Ann Fienup-Riordan, and Anna Mossolova come together to...
Alaska, which has been the 49th state of the USA since 1959, is a very unique locality according to ...
This presentation reports on my efforts to combine Native American tribal knowledge with digital res...
"Clarence L. Andrews, who has had years of experience in Government service in Alaska, has returned ...
This professional paper highlights a project in southcentral Alaska in collaboration with the Cook I...
Includes bibliographical references and index.The book describes the lifeways of the Inupiat of the ...
ABSTRACT. Northern Athabaskans with extensive knowledge of their traditional history and culture are...
This is a chapter in Language and Toponymy in Alaska and Beyond: Papers in Honor of James Kari. Book...
1956, when he conducted an archeological survey and exca-vations in the area of Anaktuvuk Pass in Al...
Geology Prof. Armand Eardley (1901-1972) accompanied Frederica De Laguna on the archaeological exped...
As one of the region’s famously productive salmon rivers, the Alagnak’s banks historically were line...
The National Park Service initiated a series of studies, working in collaboration with park-associat...
The Iñupiat communities of Point Barrow, Alaska can trace their lineage back to some of the earliest...
During the 1800s, the Russian American Company conscripted native Alaskan workers to engage in fishi...
In recent years anthropologists have begun to reflect more upon their obligations to the communitie...
Special guests Sven Haakanson, Alvin Amason, Ann Fienup-Riordan, and Anna Mossolova come together to...
Alaska, which has been the 49th state of the USA since 1959, is a very unique locality according to ...
This presentation reports on my efforts to combine Native American tribal knowledge with digital res...
"Clarence L. Andrews, who has had years of experience in Government service in Alaska, has returned ...
This professional paper highlights a project in southcentral Alaska in collaboration with the Cook I...
Includes bibliographical references and index.The book describes the lifeways of the Inupiat of the ...
ABSTRACT. Northern Athabaskans with extensive knowledge of their traditional history and culture are...
This is a chapter in Language and Toponymy in Alaska and Beyond: Papers in Honor of James Kari. Book...
1956, when he conducted an archeological survey and exca-vations in the area of Anaktuvuk Pass in Al...
Geology Prof. Armand Eardley (1901-1972) accompanied Frederica De Laguna on the archaeological exped...
As one of the region’s famously productive salmon rivers, the Alagnak’s banks historically were line...
The National Park Service initiated a series of studies, working in collaboration with park-associat...
The Iñupiat communities of Point Barrow, Alaska can trace their lineage back to some of the earliest...
During the 1800s, the Russian American Company conscripted native Alaskan workers to engage in fishi...
In recent years anthropologists have begun to reflect more upon their obligations to the communitie...