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Book Cover
E-book
Author Anderson, Doug D

Title Life at Swift Water Place : Northwest Alaska at the Threshold of European Contact
Published Fairbanks : University of Alaska Press, 2019

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Description 1 online resource (362 pages)
Contents Intro; Contents; List of Figures; List of Maps; List of Tables; Foreword by Robin Kornfield; Preface by Douglas D. Anderson; Acknowledgments; Introduction by Douglas D. Anderson; Chapter 1. The Archaeology of Swift Water Place / Douglas D. Anderson and Bruce J. Lutz; Chapter 2. Survival and Settlement on the Kobuk: A Zooarchaeological Investigation of Two Northwest Alaska Houses / Rebekah DeAngelo and Zoe Weiss; Chapter 3. Geophysical Investigations at Swift Water Place / Thomas M. Urban
Chapter 4. Dendrochronology of Swift Water Place and Other Tree-Ring Samples from Northwest Alaska / Carol Griggs, Cynthia Kocik, Thomas M. Urban, and Sturt W. ManningChapter 5. Iñuułiq Niġisuk: Bioarchaeological Assessment of Human Remains Recovered from Swift Water Place / Gary P. Aronsen; Chapter 6. Genetic and Microscopic Analysis of Human Dental Calculus from Swift Water Place / Christina Warinner, Andrew Ozga, Anita Radini, Krithivasan Sankaranarayanan, and Cecil M. Lewis Jr
Chapter 7. Stable Isotopic Dietary Analysis of Human and Faunal Remains from Swift Water Place / Peter W. Ditchfield, Thomas M. Urban, and Douglas D. AndersonChapter 8. Molecular Genetic Analysis of the Human Remains at Swift Water Place / Justin Tackney, Elisa Fair, and Dennis H. O'Rourke; Chapter 9. Triangulating Oral History, Archaeology, and Geophysics at Swift Water Place / Wanni W. Anderson; Chapter 10. Northwest Alaska Iñupiaq Historiography / Douglas D. Anderson and Wanni W. Anderson; Appendices; About the Authors; Index
Summary "The book describes the lifeways of the Inupiat of the lower Kobuk River Valley around the beginning of the 19th century, as gleaned from archaeological and oral historic research. Spanning the time just prior to and following the arrival of Otto von Kotzebue to the shores of Kotzebue Sound, our account focuses on that momentous point in history that set the stage for the incorporation of Inupiat into Western culture and the World economy. It describes what may well have been Northwest Alaska's most powerful riverine nation - the Amilgaqtuayaaqmiut - and its interactions with neighboring Inupiaq and Athapaskan peoples at the time. We make the case that this powerful nation was in fact a major political entity, one of several nations comprising the three regional Inupiaq groupings along the Kobuk River described by Ernest S. Burch, Jr. in his University of Alaska Press publications, "The Inupiaq Eskimo Nations of Northwest Alaska" (1998) and "Social Life in Northwest Alaska" (2006). Contrary to Burch who considered the 3 regional groupings as primary societal formations, we see the Amilgaqtuayaaqmiut and other similarly organized social groups as the region's primary polities"-- Provided by publisher
Notes Print version record
Subject Inupiat -- First contact with other peoples -- Alaska -- Kobuk River Valley
Inupiat -- Social life and customs -- 19th century
Inupiat -- Alaska -- Kobuk River Valley -- History -- 19th century
Inupiat
Inupiat -- First contact with other peoples
Inupiat -- Social life and customs
Alaska -- Kobuk River Valley
Genre/Form e-books.
History
Livres numériques.
Form Electronic book
Author Anderson, Wanni W
ISBN 9781602233690
1602233691