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Archaeologies of Climate Change: Perceptions and Prospects
Examines the role of archeology as both a the study of the past but also as a means to find a solutions for the future.
Community Perspectives, Caribou User Participation and the Beverly-Qamanirjuaq Caribou Management Board in Northcentral Canada
Contemporary Inuit Drawings: The Gift Collection of Frederick and Lucy S. Herman
Cultural Negotiation and Schooling: New Idea or New Clothing For An Old Idea?
Ethical Perspectives of a People: A Narrative
The Fabric of Basketry: Initial Archaeological Study of the Grass Artifacts Assemblage from the Nunalleq Site, Southwest Alaska
Highlights the excavation of grass artifacts near Quinhagak, Alaska and what they can reveal about the precontact Yup'ik people.
Introduction
An introduction to a special issue on climate change and its effects on arctic communities. For English scroll down to page 15.
Investigating the Utility of Birds in Precontact Yup'ik Subsistence: A Preliminary Analysis of the Avian Remains from Nunalleq
Highlights the important role of birds for precontact Yup'ik as a soruce of food and material culture.
Language, Power, and Pedagogy: Whose School Is It?
Material Issues: The Impact of Regulation on Native Art
New Isotope Evidence for Diachronic and Site-Spatial Variation in Precontact Diet during the Little Ice Age at Nunalleq, Southwest Alaska
Using archeological data to examine the changes of the Yup'ik diet during different time periods and what those changes can tell about Yup'ik history.
Northern Lights: Inuit Textile Art From the Canadian Arctic
Nunalleq: Archaeology, Climate Change, and Community Engagement in a Yup'ik Village
"The Old Village": Yup'ik Precontact Archaeology and Community-Based Research at the Nunalleq Site, Quinhagak, Alaska
Examines the use of community-based archaeology in response to the destruction of archaeological heritage sites due to climate change.