Venuemapinfo.Htm Kilometers

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Venuemapinfo.Htm Kilometers 176°E 178°E 180° 178°W 176°W 174°W 172°W 170°W 168°W 166°W 164°W 162°W 160°W 158°W 156°W 154°W 152°W 150°W 148°W 146°W 144°W 142°W 140°W 138°W 136°W 134°W 132°W 130°W 128°W 126°W 124°W 122°W 120°W 118°W 116°W 114°W C T I C O C E A BARROW N Alaska Court System Venue Districts A R ! 050 100 200 300 400 B Miles E A U F O R Kilometers A T 050 100 200 300 400 E ! Wainwright S Harr SE ison Bay A !( 68°N KOTZEBUE Superior Court Trial Site Icy Cape ! Atqasuk Judicial District I ! Kaktovik FIRST ! Prudhoe Bay Superior Court Venue District Boundary 66°N H ! mden Bay ! Ca ! Nuiqsut Deadhorse !( ver Nabesna i C !( Community R Yakutat District Court Trial Site K ! Point Lay S a 3 U g State Highway a District Court Venue District Boundary v a H k n i u r ar k t 7# p o JudicialJudicial DistrictDistrict Boundary Boundary Mileposts C a k K This map references the appropriate place of trial absent any order changing venue for all cases filed on or after October 14, 2011. A trial location is not necessarily the correct location for case filing and pretrial work. Check with the clerk of the court to determine what types of filings are accepted at each location. iver R i R v Presumptive Presumptive Presumptive Presumptive Presumptive Presumptive Presumptive Presumptive Presumptive Presumptive ille e olv r C District Court Superior Court District Court Superior Court District Court Superior Court District Court Superior Court District Court Superior Court Community Trial Site Trial Site Community Trial Site Trial Site Community Trial Site Trial Site Community Trial Site Trial Site Community Trial Site Trial Site ! Point Hope B Adak Unalaska Unalaska Cordova Cordova Cordova Kachemak Homer Homer New Stuyahok Dillingham Dillingham Seldovia Homer Homer R O Afognak Kodiak Kodiak Council Nome Nome Kaguyak Kodiak Kodiak Newhalen Naknek Naknek Seward Seward Seward O K Akhiok Kodiak Kodiak Craig Craig Craig Kake Kake Petersburg Newtok Bethel Bethel Shageluk Aniak Bethel S Akiachak Bethel Bethel Crooked Creek Aniak Bethel Kaktovik Barrow Barrow Nightmute Bethel Bethel Shaktoolik Unalakleet Nome R A N G E ! Arctic Village 66°N ! Red Dog Mine Akiak Bethel Bethel Barrow Barrow Kenai Kenai Nikiski Kenai Kenai Shemya Station Unalaska Unalaska Noatak Deadhorse Kalifornsky Riv Akutan Unalaska Unalaska Deering Kotzebue Kotzebue Kaltag Galena Nenana Nikolaevsk Homer Homer Shishmaref Nome Nome er ! Anaktuvuk Pass RUSSIA MP 232 Alakanuk Emmonak Bethel Delta Junction Delta Junction Delta Junction Karluk Kodiak Kodiak Nikolai Aniak Bethel Shungnak Kotzebue Kotzebue ! Kivalina 7# Alatna Nenana Nenana Dillingham Dillingham Dillingham Kasaan Craig Craig Nikolski Unalaska Unalaska Sitka Sitka Sitka 64°N Alcan Tok Tok Diomede Nome Nome Kasigluk Bethel Bethel Ninilchik Homer Homer Skagway Skagway Juneau iver ! Noatak R Aleknagik Dillingham Dillingham Dot Lake Tok Tok Kasilof Kenai Kenai Noatak Kotzebue Kotzebue Skwentna Palmer Palmer Allakaket Nenana Nenana Douglas Juneau Juneau Kenai Kenai Kenai Nome Nome Nome Slana Glennallen Glennallen SECOND Ambler Kotzebue Kotzebue Dry Creek Delta Junction Delta Junction Kenny Lake Glennallen Glennallen Nondalton Naknek Naknek Sleetmute Aniak Bethel K MP 191.57# Anaktuvuk Pass Barrow Barrow Dutch Harbor Unalaska Unalaska Ketchikan Ketchikan Ketchikan Noorvik Kotzebue Kotzebue Soldotna Kenai Kenai O T Wiseman ! Anchor Point Homer Homer Eagle Tok Tok Kiana Kotzebue Kotzebue North Pole Fairbanks Fairbanks Solomon Nome Nome Z er Anchorage Anchorage Anchorage Eagle River Anchorage Anchorage King Cove Sand Point Anchorage Northway Tok Tok South Naknek Naknek Naknek v ! Cha E Ri Coldfoot ndalar Anderson Nenana Nenana Eagle Village Tok Tok King Island Nome Nome Northway Junction Tok Tok Stebbins Unalakleet Nome B uk U ob ! Venetie Angoon Angoon Sitka Edna Bay Craig Craig King Salmon Naknek Naknek Nuiqsut Barrow Barrow Sterling Kenai Kenai ! KOTZEBUE K ! Ambler R E ! ! iv Porcupine Aniak Aniak Bethel Eek Bethel Bethel Kipnuk Bethel Bethel Nulato Galena Nenana Stevens Village Fort Yukon Fairbanks Kiana e r Anvik Aniak Bethel Egegik Naknek Naknek Kivalina Kotzebue Kotzebue Nunam Iqua Emmonak Bethel Stony River Aniak Bethel ! Noorvik ! Chalkyitsik S ! Kobuk ! O Shungnak ! ! Bettles ! Evansville Arctic Village Fort Yukon Fairbanks Eklutna Anchorage Anchorage Klawock Craig Craig Nunapitchuk Bethel Bethel Summit Lake Glennallen Glennallen Atka Unalaska Unalaska Ekuk Dillingham Dillingham Haines Juneau Ohogamiut Bethel Bethel Susitna Palmer Palmer T U ! Fort Yukon Klukwan I Atmautluak Bethel Bethel Ekwok Dillingham Dillingham Knik Palmer Palmer Old Harbor Kodiak Kodiak Sutton Palmer Palmer ! Shishmaref N ! Selawik A D Atqasuk Barrow Barrow Elfin Cove Sitka Sitka Kobuk Kotzebue Kotzebue Ophir Aniak Bethel Takotna Aniak Bethel LITTLE R Allakaket !! DIOMEDE T Alatna Attu Unalaska Unalaska Elim Nome Nome Kodiak Kodiak Kodiak Oscarville Bethel Bethel Talkeetna Palmer Palmer ISLAND ! Y S Beaver ! ! Birch Creek U Auke Bay Juneau Juneau Emmonak Emmonak Bethel Kokhanok Naknek Naknek Ouzinkie Kodiak Kodiak Tanacross Tok Tok Diomede K O Ayakulik Kodiak Kodiak Ester Fairbanks Fairbanks Koliganek Dillingham Dillingham Paimiut Bethel Bethel Tanana Nenana Nenana ! Deering N Barrow Barrow Barrow Evansville Nenana Nenana Bethel Bethel Palmer Palmer Palmer Tatitlek Valdez Valdez G Kongiganak ! Wales N ! Beaver Fort Yukon Fairbanks Excursion Inlet Juneau Juneau Kotlik Emmonak Bethel Pauloff Harbor Sand Point Anchorage Tazlina Glennallen Glennallen ! S ! 64°N I Tin City E ! Buckland Stevens Village ! W ! Candle ! Circle Belkofski Sand Point Anchorage Eyak Cordova Cordova Kotzebue Kotzebue Kotzebue Paxson Glennallen Glennallen Telida Aniak Bethel R A ! Hughes E R D Beluga Kenai Kenai Fairbanks Fairbanks Fairbanks Koyuk Unalakleet Nome Pedro Bay Naknek Naknek Teller Nome Nome B C P Bethel Bethel Bethel False Pass Sand Point Anchorage Koyukuk Galena Nenana Pelican Sitka Sitka Tenakee Springs Juneau Juneau E R AN ! Brevig Mission N I ! R U Bettles Nenana Nenana Ferry Nenana Nenana Kupreanof Petersburg Petersburg Perryville Naknek Naknek Tetlin Tok Tok ! N Central Port Clarence S U ! I V E . ! L ! S AD Teller A ! Huslia Circle Hot Springs Big Delta Delta Junction Delta Junction Flat Aniak Bethel Kwethluk Bethel Bethel Petersburg Petersburg Petersburg Tetlin Junction Tok Tok . Livengood A 62°N A Big Lake Palmer Palmer Fort Yukon Fort Yukon Fairbanks Bethel Bethel Petersville Palmer Palmer Thorne Bay Craig Craig ! 6 Kwigillingok ! Mary's Igloo . ! Bill Moores Emmonak Bethel Fox Fairbanks Fairbanks Palmer Palmer Pilot Point Naknek Naknek Tin City Nome Nome King ! Rampart Lake Louise Island FOURTH Birch Creek Fort Yukon Fairbanks Gakona Glennallen Glennallen Lake Minchumina Aniak Bethel Pilot Station Bethel Bethel Togiak Dillingham Dillingham MP 31 Eagle Boundary Tok Tok Galena Galena Nenana Larsen Bay Kodiak Kodiak Pitkas Point Bethel Bethel Tok Tok Tok 7# ! ! Brevig Mission Nome Nome Nome Nome Naknek Naknek Platinum Bethel Bethel Toksook Bay Bethel Bethel Minto ! Gambell Levelock Council Tanana ! Chena Hot Springs Eagle Village ! R ! Buckland Kotzebue Kotzebue Georgetown Aniak Bethel Lignite Nenana Nenana Pleasant Valley Fairbanks Fairbanks Tonsina Glennallen Glennallen ! Koyuk E Manley Hot Springs Fox ! Candle Kotzebue Kotzebue Girdwood Anchorage Anchorage Lime Village Aniak Bethel Point Baker Petersburg Petersburg Tuluksak Bethel Bethel V ! ! Pleasant Valley R I Ester ! Cantwell Nenana Nenana Glennallen Glennallen Glennallen Livengood Nenana Nenana Point Hope Point Hope Kotzebue Tuntutuliak Bethel Bethel ! White Mountain N ! ! Two Rivers ! NOME ! ! Koyukuk O Central Fairbanks Fairbanks Golovin Nome Nome Lower Kalskag Aniak Bethel Point Lay Barrow Barrow Tununak Bethel Bethel Solomon K na ! North Pole Gambell ! U a ! Elim! FAIRBANKS Chalkyitsik Fort Yukon Fairbanks Goodnews Bay Bethel Bethel Glennallen Glennallen Port Alexander Sitka Sitka Twin Hills Dillingham Dillingham ! Golovin (Cheenik) ! Y MP 325 R ! Lower Tonsina n Bay ! Nulato !Galena Tan 7# Moose Creek o ! ! Ruby iv Chase Palmer Palmer Grayling Aniak Bethel Manley Hot Springs Nenana Nenana Port Alsworth Naknek Naknek Two Rivers Fairbanks Fairbanks Nort e ! ! Chefornak Bethel Bethel Gulkana Glennallen Glennallen Dillingham Dillingham Port Clarence Nome Nome Tyonek Kenai Kenai Savoonga NENANA! r !Salcha ! Manokotak ! Boundary ! ! MP 295 Chicken ! Chena Hot Springs Fairbanks Fairbanks Gustavus Juneau Juneau Marshall Bethel Bethel Port Graham Homer Homer Uganik Kodiak Kodiak Shaktoolik 3 Harding-Birch Lakes # 7 2 Chenega Seward Seward Haines Haines Juneau Marys Igloo Nome Nome Port Heiden Naknek Naknek Ugashik Naknek Naknek ! D ! Kaltag Anderson N Big Delta ! Chevak Bethel Bethel Halibut Cove Homer Homer McCarthy Glennallen Glennallen Port Lions Kodiak Kodiak Umkumiut Bethel Bethel DELTA JUNCTION Chickaloon Palmer Palmer Hamilton Emmonak Bethel McGrath Aniak Bethel Port Moller Sand Point Anchorage Unalakleet Unalakleet Nome ST. LAWRENCE U ! 5 O ! Chicken Tok Tok Homer Homer Nenana Nenana Port Protection Petersburg Petersburg Unalaska Unalaska Unalaska ISLAND S Healy Lake Happy Valley McKinley Park N ! Ferry Chignik Naknek Naknek Harding-Birch Lakes Fairbanks Fairbanks Medfra Aniak Bethel Portage Creek Dillingham Dillingham Unga Sand Point Anchorage O ! T MP 1377 ! Chignik Lagoon Naknek Naknek Healy Nenana Nenana Bethel Bethel Primrose Seward Seward Upper Kalskag Aniak Bethel 62°N N O R Unalakleet ! Lignite 7#! ! Dot Lake Mekoryuk ! Healy A L A S K A Dry Creek Chignik Lake Naknek Naknek Healy Lake Delta Junction Delta
Recommended publications
  • NOTES on the BIRDS of CHIRIKOF ISLAND, ALASKA Jack J
    NOTES ON THE BIRDS OF CHIRIKOF ISLAND, ALASKA JACK J. WITHROW, University of Alaska Museum, 907 Yukon Drive, Fairbanks, Alaska 99775; [email protected] ABSTRACT: Isolated in the western Gulf of Alaska 61 km from nearest land and 74 km southwest of the Kodiak archipelago, Chirikof Island has never seen a focused investigation of its avifauna. Annotated status and abundance for 89 species recorded during eight visits 2008–2014 presented here include eastern range extensions for three Beringian subspecies of the Pacific Wren (Troglodytes pacificus semidiensis), Song Sparrow (Melospiza melodia sanaka), and Gray-crowned Rosy-Finch (Leucost- icte tephrocotis griseonucha). A paucity of breeding bird species is thought to be a result of the long history of the presence of introduced cattle and introduced foxes (Vulpes lagopus), both of which persist to this day. Unique among sizable islands in southwestern Alaska, Chirikof Island (55° 50′ N 155° 37′ W) has escaped focused investigations of its avifauna, owing to its geographic isolation, lack of an all-weather anchorage, and absence of major seabird colonies. In contrast, nearly every other sizable island or group of islands in this region has been visited by biologists, and they or their data have added to the published literature on birds: the Aleutian Is- lands (Gibson and Byrd 2007), the Kodiak archipelago (Friedmann 1935), the Shumagin Islands (Bailey 1978), the Semidi Islands (Hatch and Hatch 1983a), the Sandman Reefs (Bailey and Faust 1980), and other, smaller islands off the Alaska Peninsula (Murie 1959, Bailey and Faust 1981, 1984). With the exception of most of the Kodiak archipelago these islands form part of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge (AMNWR), and many of these publications are focused largely on seabirds.
    [Show full text]
  • Changes in the Distribution of Alaska's Commercial Fisheries Entry Permits, 1975-2019 Page I Contents
    CHANGES IN THE DISTRIBUTION OF ALASKA’S COMMERCIAL FISHERIES ENTRY PERMITS, 1975-2019 CFEC Report 20-01N December 2020 Alaska Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission 8800 Glacier Highway Suite 109 P.O. Box 110302 Juneau, Alaska 99811-0302 (907) 789-6160 OEO/ADA Compliance Statement The Commission is administratively attached to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) administers all programs and activities free from discrimination based on race, color, national origin, age, sex, religion, marital status, pregnancy, parenthood, or disability. The department administers all programs and activities in compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, the Age Discrimination Act of 1975, and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. If you believe you have been discriminated against in any program, activity, or facility please write: • ADF&G ADA Coordinator, P.O. Box 115526, Juneau, AK 99811-5526 • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, MS 2042, Arlington, VA 22203 • Office of Equal Opportunity, U.S. Department of the Interior, 1849 C Street NW, MS 5230, Washington DC 20240. The department’s ADA Coordinator can be reached via phone at the following numbers: • (VOICE) 907-465-6077 • (Statewide Telecommunication Device for the Deaf) 1-800-478-3648 • (Juneau TDD) 907-465-3646 • (FAX) 907-465-6078 For information on alternative formats and questions on this publication, please contact the following: Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission (CFEC) Research Section 8800 Glacier Highway, Suite 109 P.O.
    [Show full text]
  • Population Assessment, Ecology and Trophic Relationships of Steller Sea Liorq in the Gulf of Alaska
    Al'lNUAL REPORT Contract #03-5-022-69 Research Unit #243 1 April 1978 - 31 Marc~ 1979 Pages: Population Assessment, Ecology and Trophic Relationships of Steller Sea LiorQ in the Gulf of Alaska Principal Investigators: Donald Calkins, Marine Mammal Biologist Kenneth Pitcher, Marine ~~mmal Biologist Alaska Department of Fish and Game 333 Raspberry Road Anchorage, Alaska 99502 Assisted by: Karl Schneider Dennis McAllister Walt Cunningham Susan Stanford Dave Johnson Louise Smith Paul Smith Nancy Murray TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Introduction. • . i Steller Sea lions in the Gulf of Alaska (by Donald Calkins). 3 Breeding Rookeries and Hauling Areas . 3 I. Surveys • . 3 II. Pup counts. 4 Distribution and Movements . 10 Sea Otter Distribution and Abundance in the Southern Kodiak Archipelago and the Semidi Islands (by Karl Schneider). • • • • 24 Summary •••••• 24 Introduction • • • 25 Kodiak Archipelago 26 Background • • • • . 26 Methods•.•••. 27 Results and discussion • • • • • . 28 1. Distribution••• 30 2. Population size •••••. 39 3. Status. 40 4. Future. 41 Semidi Islands 43 Background • • 43 Methods ••••••••• 43 Results and discussion • 44 Belukha Whales in Lower Cook Inlet (by Nancy Murray) . • • • • • 47 Distribution and Abundance • 47 Habitat••..•••• 50 Population Dynamics •• 54 Food Habits•••••.••. 56 Behavior • . 58 Literature Cited. 59 Introduction This project is a detailed study of the population dynamics, life history and some aspects of the ecology of the Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus). In addition to the sea lion investigations, the work has been expanded to include an examination of the distribution and abundance of belukha whales (Detphinapterus Zeu~dS) in Cook Inlet and the distribution and abundance of sea otters (Enhydra lutris) near the south end of the Kodiak Archipelago.
    [Show full text]
  • Status and Occurrence of Parakeet Auklet (Aethia Psittacula) in British Columbia
    Status and Occurrence of Parakeet Auklet (Aethia psittacula) in British Columbia. By Rick Toochin and Louis Haviland. Introduction and Distribution The Parakeet Auklet (Aethia psittacula) is a small species of auklet found breeding in the Beringia region of Alaska and Russia (Gaston and Jones 1998). This species has an Alaskan population estimated at 1 million birds (Gaston and Jones 1998). There is also a Russian population, but the exact population total is not known, due to a lack of population inventory work, but it is estimated to number about 400,000 birds with the vast majority, about 300,000 birds, found in the Sea of Okhotsk (Gaston and Jones 1998). The Parakeet Auklet has breeding colonies that are found on rocky mainland points and islands in the Gulf of Alaska (Jones et al. 2001). These sites include: Shumagin Island, Semidi Isand, Chirikof Island near Kodiak, locally in Kenai Peninsula and southeastern Alaska with small numbers south to St. Lazaria, Hazy and Forrester Island; and in the Aleutian Islands west to Buldir and Agattu Island; and in the Bering Sea at Little Diomede, St. Lawrence Island, King Island, St. Matthew Island, Pribilof Island and Nunivak Island (Sowls et al. 1978). The Parakeet Auklet also breeds in Russia in the Kurile Island chain with colonies on Chirinkontan, Lovushki, Raikoke, Matua, Yankicha, Simushir, Brat Chirpoev, Urup, and Iturup Island (Jones et al. 2001, Brazil 2009). They are also breeding on islands in the Sea of Okhotsk with colonies on Sakhalin, Tyuleniy, Iona, Talan, and Yamskyie Island (Jones et al. 2001, Brazil 2009). The Parakeet Auklet is also found breeding on Commander Island, and northwards locally along coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula, on Karaginski Island, Cape Navarin, and on Chukotka Peninsula (Konyukhov 1989, Kondratyev et al.
    [Show full text]
  • Alaska Native
    To conduct a simple search of the many GENERAL records of Alaska’ Native People in the National Archives Online Catalog use the search term Alaska Native. To search specific areas or villages see indexes and information below. Alaska Native Villages by Name A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Alaska is home to 229 federally recognized Alaska Native Villages located across a wide geographic area, whose records are as diverse as the people themselves. Customs, culture, artwork, and native language often differ dramatically from one community to another. Some are nestled within large communities while others are small and remote. Some are urbanized while others practice subsistence living. Still, there are fundamental relationships that have endured for thousands of years. One approach to understanding links between Alaska Native communities is to group them by language. This helps the student or researcher to locate related communities in a way not possible by other means. It also helps to define geographic areas in the huge expanse that is Alaska. For a map of Alaska Native language areas, see the generalized map of Alaska Native Language Areas produced by the University of Alaska at Fairbanks. Click on a specific language below to see Alaska federally recognized communities identified with each language. Alaska Native Language Groups (click to access associated Alaska Native Villages) Athabascan Eyak Tlingit Aleut Eskimo Haida Tsimshian Communities Ahtna Inupiaq with Mixed Deg Hit’an Nanamiut Language Dena’ina (Tanaina)
    [Show full text]
  • A Brief Look at the History and Culture of Woody Island, Alaska
    A Brief Look At The History April 25 and Culture of Woody Island, 2010 Alaska This document is intended to be a brief lesson on the prehistory and history of Woody Island and the Kodiak Archipelago. It is also intended to be used as a learning resource for fifth graders who By Gordon Pullar Jr. visit Woody Island every spring. Introduction Woody Island is a peaceful place with a lush green landscape and an abundance of wild flowers. While standing on the beach on a summer day a nice ocean breeze can be felt and the smell of salt water is in the air. The island is covered by a dense spruce forest with a forest floor covered in thick soft moss. Woody Island is place where one can escape civilization and enjoy the wilderness while being only a 15 minute boat ride from Kodiak. While experiencing Woody Island today it may be hard for one to believe that it was once a bustling community, even larger in population than the City of Kodiak. The Kodiak Archipelago is made up of 25 islands, the largest being Kodiak Island. Kodiak Island is separated from mainland Alaska by the Shelikof Strait. Kodiak Island is approximately 100 miles long and 60 miles wide and is the second largest island in the United States behind the “big” island of Hawaii. The city of Kodiak is the largest community on the island with a total population of about 6,000 (City Data 2008), and the entire Kodiak Island Borough population is about 13,500 people (Census estimate 2009).
    [Show full text]
  • Chirikof Island Salmon Assessment, 2016. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Regional Information Report 4K16-03, Kodiak
    Regional Information Report No. 4K16-03 Chirikof Island Salmon Assessment, 2015 by Mark J. Witteveen and M. Birch Foster September 2016 Alaska Department of Fish and Game Divisions of Sport Fish and Commercial Fisheries Symbols and Abbreviations The following symbols and abbreviations, and others approved for the Système International d'Unités (SI), are used without definition in the following reports by the Divisions of Sport Fish and of Commercial Fisheries: Fishery Manuscripts, Fishery Data Series Reports, Fishery Management Reports, and Special Publications. All others, including deviations from definitions listed below, are noted in the text at first mention, as well as in the titles or footnotes of tables, and in figure or figure captions. Weights and measures (metric) General Mathematics, statistics centimeter cm Alaska Administrative all standard mathematical deciliter dL Code AAC signs, symbols and gram g all commonly accepted abbreviations hectare ha abbreviations e.g., Mr., Mrs., alternate hypothesis HA kilogram kg AM, PM, etc. base of natural logarithm e kilometer km all commonly accepted catch per unit effort CPUE liter L professional titles e.g., Dr., Ph.D., coefficient of variation CV meter m R.N., etc. common test statistics (F, t, χ2, etc.) milliliter mL at @ confidence interval CI millimeter mm compass directions: correlation coefficient east E (multiple) R Weights and measures (English) north N correlation coefficient cubic feet per second ft3/s south S (simple) r foot ft west W covariance cov gallon gal copyright degree (angular ) ° inch in corporate suffixes: degrees of freedom df mile mi Company Co. expected value E nautical mile nmi Corporation Corp.
    [Show full text]
  • Catherine F. West Department of Archaeology Boston University 675 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, Massachusetts 02215
    Catherine F. West Department of Archaeology Boston University 675 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, Massachusetts 02215 [email protected] (617) 358-1652 http://sites.bu.edu/zooarchlab/ ___________________________________________________________________________________________ Academic Positions Boston University, Department of Archaeology 2013-Present Research Assistant Professor Boston University Marine Program 2015-Present Affiliated Faculty Boston University Biogeosciences Program 2015-Present Affiliated Faculty University of Maine, Department of Anthropology and Climate Change Institute 2011-2013 Assistant Professor National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution 2011-Present Research Collaborator Program in Human Ecology and Archaeobiology, Smithsonian Institution 2010-2011 Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA Research Assistant 2001-2005 Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, Seattle, WA 2000-2003 Research Assistant, Archaeology Public Outreach Coordinator Education University of Washington, Seattle, WA March 2009 Ph.D., Anthropology University of Washington, Seattle, WA March 2003 M.A., Anthropology Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, PA May 1999 B.A., History 2 Archaeological Field Experience Alutiiq Museum Community Archaeology Project and Field School, Kodiak, AK 2015 Co-Director http://www.alutiiqmuseum.org/education/programs/208-community-archaeology.html Chirikof Island, Alaska Expedition (funded by National Geographic) 2013 Principal Investigator http://sites.bu.edu/zooarchlab/research/
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Timeline for Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge
    Historical Timeline Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge Much of the refuge has been protected as a national wildlife refuge for over a century, and we recognize that refuge lands are the ancestral homelands of Alaska Native people. Development of sophisticated tools and the abundance of coastal and marine wildlife have made it possible for people to thrive here for thousands of years. So many facets of Alaska’s history happened on the lands and waters of the Alaska Maritime Refuge that the Refuge seems like a time-capsule story of the state and the conservation of island wildlife: • Pre 1800s – The first people come to the islands, the Russian voyages of discovery, the beginnings of the fur trade, first rats and fox introduced to islands, Steller sea cow goes extinct. • 1800s – Whaling, America buys Alaska, growth of the fox fur industry, beginnings of the refuge. • 1900 to 1945 – Wildlife Refuge System is born and more land put in the refuge, wildlife protection increases through treaties and legislation, World War II rolls over the refuge, rats and foxes spread to more islands. The Aleutian Islands WWII National Monument designation recognizes some of these significant events and places. • 1945 to the present – Cold War bases built on refuge, nuclear bombs on Amchitka, refuge expands and protections increase, Aleutian goose brought back from near extinction, marine mammals in trouble. Refuge History - Pre - 1800 A World without People Volcanoes push up from the sea. Ocean levels fluctuate. Animals arrive and adapt to dynamic marine conditions as they find niches along the forming continent’s miles of coastline.
    [Show full text]
  • Alaska OCS Socioeconomic Studies Program
    . i, WUOE (ixlw Technical Report Number 54 Volume 1 -, Alaska OCS Socioeconomic Studies Program Sponsor: Bureau of Land Management — Alaska Outer ‘ Bering–Normn Pwdeum Development Scenarios Sociocultural Syst~ms Analysis The United States Department of the Interior was designated by the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Lands Act of 1953 to carry out the majority of the Act’s provisions for administering the mineral leasing and develop- ment of offshore areas of the United States under federal jurisdiction. Within the Department, the Bureau of Land Management (ELM) has the responsibility to meet requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) as well as other legislation and regulations dealing with the effects of offshore development. In Alaska, unique cultural differences and climatic conditions create a need for developing addi- tional socioeconomic and environmental information to improve OCS deci- sion making at all governmental levels. In fulfillment of its federal responsibilities and with an awareness of these additional information needs, the BLM has initiated several investigative programs, one of which is the Alaska OCS Socioeconomic Studies Program (SESP). The Alaska OCS Socioeconomic Studies Program is a multi-year research effort which attempts to predict and evaluate the effects of Alaska OCS Petroleum Development upon the physical, social, and economic environ- ments within the state. The overall methodology is divided into three broad research components. The first component identifies an alterna- tive set of assumptions regarding the location, the nature, and the timing of future petroleum events and related activities. In this component, the program takes into account the particular needs of the petroleum industry and projects the human, technological, economic, and environmental offshore and onshore development requirements of the regional petroleum industry.
    [Show full text]
  • This Manuscript Has Been Reproduced from the Microfilm Master. UMI Films the Text Directly from the Original Or Copy Submitted
    Returning: Twentieth century performances of the King Island Wolf Dance Item Type Thesis Authors Kingston, Deanna Marie Download date 09/10/2021 06:41:20 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/11122/9533 INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6” x 9” black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. Bell & Howell Information and Learning 300 North Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 USA 800-521-0600 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner.
    [Show full text]
  • Ring of Fire Proposed RMP and Final EIS- Volume 1 Cover Page
    U.S. Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management N T OF M E TH T E R A IN P T E E D R . I O S R . U M 9 AR 8 4 C H 3, 1 Ring of Fire FINAL Proposed Resource Management Plan and Final Environmental Impact Statement and Final Environmental Impact Statement and Final Environmental Management Plan Resource Proposed Ring of Fire Volume 1: Chapters 1-3 July 2006 Anchorage Field Office, Alaska July 200 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMMENT 6 Volume 1 The Bureau of Land Management Today Our Vision To enhance the quality of life for all citizens through the balanced stewardship of America’s public lands and resources. Our Mission To sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations. BLM/AK/PL-06/022+1610+040 BLM File Photos: 1. Aerial view of the Chilligan River north of Chakachamna Lake in the northern portion of Neacola Block 2. OHV users on Knik River gravel bar 3. Mountain goat 1 4. Helicopter and raft at Tsirku River 2 3 4 U.S. Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Ring of Fire Proposed Resource Management Plan and Final Environmental Impact Statement Prepared By: Anchorage Field Office July 2006 United States Department of the Interior BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT Alaska State Office 222 West Seventh Avenue, #13 Anchorage, Alaska 995 13-7599 http://www.ak.blm.gov Dear Reader: Enclosed for your review is the Proposed Resource Management Plan and Final Environmental Impact Statement (Proposed RMPIFinal EIS) for the lands administered in the Ring of Fire by the Bureau of Land Management's (BLM's) Anchorage Field Office (AFO).
    [Show full text]