Download a Map of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Download a Map of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park To Delta Junction To a and Fairbanks in Tok h r c e o v 2 i utof y t k C f Glenn Highw a M s E R o i T N h T A C Slana S T A Noyes Mountain T E T L I N L O W L A N D S DAWSON 8147ft N 2483m iver a R be M TETLIN NATIONAL sn O U Fish Lake 4 a N T Chistochina A I WILDLIFE REFUGE onjek R N D oa S r d ppe Co G u l r 1 ka e v n i 1 Jack r a r R e Lake e v v i i R R a n RANGE Ewan R o i v k Tanada Lake a R e a Capital Mountain sn Crosswind r Lake e Wellesley i G 7731ft Copper b v Lake a Mountain e 2356m r Lake N r r e e 4960ft Beaver Creek p v N i o 1512m Wellesley p Nabesna U R C Lake Caution. Private T Riv k property interspersed er e Z Gulkana Gakona e with public lands. ord r O a Sanf C n Tanada Peak T a is 9358ft I h Mt Sanford 2852m N C sina Cooper Pass 16237ft ack Mt Allen 4949m J 9480ft 2883m M R O YU E Mt Drum I U C r Tolsona Lake N e Glennallen K A N 1 12010ft iv L T B a 3661m A a O R I S in R G u zl i i ALA Ta River s ve I lto NTER L To a r Mt Gordon N ff I w R N Anchorage a 9040ft S C G l E r K SKA Mt Zanetti P 2755m e E P G t R A N i 13009ft R O Mt Jarvis Braye h Chisana ITO 3965m C 13421ft Caution. Private Lakes 4091m CIER W LA property interspersed R Mt Wrangell G with public lands. Y ver Cr Tazlina A Bea e Copper Center 14163ft R ek E N Lake 4317m I A W S C I r A H e L C iv R G Wiki Peak St. Anne R 7655ft Lake A a r 2333m A din e la a River iv N eek s D R NA SNA F r k BE r C a a is a G n c a in in l Ptarmigan t s E Solo Mountain u C a l o t Lake K Willow Lake p e L 5875ft p h 1791m Rock er C L e Mt Blackburn Regal Mountain Solo Lake ak Ri 13860ft 13600ft 13845ft L erton ve Clear 16390ft Lake W H dg H r 4225m 4145m 4220m hite r ig K E Creek 4996m Rive h l ig iver w u h R Atna Peaks a a a w a y n n y e i M t u l Tonsina O K Castle 10 S U kolai Mountain C Liberty Dixie Pass KE N re Skolai Pass N Donoho ek River Falls N R Mt Sulzer I Peak E T a I in C Chitistone Peak 10926ft s O 6696ft C To a A in r T A 3330m e T 2041m L s M t na iv I R la R G o u N E k c Mt Natazhat K us I C K Hidden G S Chitistone C 13435ft T C KLUANE a Chitina r A L r Creek O r e Falls 4095m Strelna v L A t i h C O R D R Lake G Tosina y I R e i E n GAME o v L e Lake R r o n r t T L r C Kennicott e is e C o E j h Caution. Private v it e v i h b it Chokosna i C r S k i property interspersed R e y K SANCTUARY n R e S Mt Churchill L V a a k U ilahin with public lands. U U TL GL A G AN AC McCarthy N R 15638ft UNITED S IER L r IV D e E Mt Bona 4767m v Long Sourdough R E i S 16421ft k R I C Z R Rive Lake Kennicott Peak T e K 4 r Y i ive r 5005m e v L R R r River 6201ft ANADA G A e Burwash Landing U r N C A L R e Nizina 1890m Dan Creek G r N A IE TOSINA GLAC p Lakina E E C p May Creek ele I o Spirit Mountain te E Nelson Mountain S R C 7287ft C T 5457ft C University Peak h AT L 2221m 1663m h it 14470ft A H a in ER a k a CI K n i 4411m A E a ES L git n Mt Bear Mt Wood G Destruction Bay a a 15885ft Yo R S 14831ft u E hway n E 4842m D ig g I 4521m n H es R L uk rdso ak ive C A E e L M E a r A h ay R A C b re L T c Te i C ek i v C I Mt Macauly Valdez R O G S e R LL R River r iv N 15405ft iv e S r RID R er GE N IE Mt Slaggard 4695m I C K A T 15575ft Klu T L a W G 4747m n A Mt Steele r a H D 16644ft e Hanagita Peak AR v N R Lo i R 5073m E we R 8504ft BA I Tasnu C na 2592m A R L River i G er v Mt Lucania mn e re r 17147ft K B 5226m E J To C H IER Mt Walsh N C O Haines U Riv LA 14780ft G er G D A CHITINA 4505m Junction C H S l i M Baldy Mountain m O s U N T A I N S 7230ft 2204m R i v WAL e SH r LO G E GA LAC KLUANE G R A N IER N I T E L r R A N NATIONAL PARK ve N GLA GE GL I R i ALLE CIER ACIER IE R W C ER R A NICKE GL T A AC A E H IER I S L N L de C G A U u C A S R W H Gr eek L A G anit Cr K IL e G IER D Mt Hawkins L S C A A S E A I L G 10395ft C Ross Green I K G L Miles V AC IE I L T ER 3168m R T Lake R Lake I C E I O G C M IL C S ES G Mt Tom White O E L A IER ACIER McArthur Peak 11210ft F L AC L 3417m JEFFER 14400ft G G CHUGACH IES GLACIER King Peak 4389m I N E E A 16971ft N Cordova M Juniper L ND R NATIONAL 5173m O LA E Island D T IS BAG S S H LEY Mt Logan IN S H R K FOREST E W R I 19850ft U HA IE CE V C FI B L LA EL 6050m A G W D B ER AX Mt Steller A RIV ELL R M R 10 r IN 10617ft RIDGE D ive RT Mt Miller Marti R MA 3236m A n 8875ft N 2705m CO GLA O G COPPER LUM CIER LO BUS E WE RIVER GLACIER U Mt Alverstone LL EWARD GLAC 14565ft S G DELTA S IER LA Mt Vancouver 4439m CI CIER 15700ft ADA N ER r LA CAN ve G YA 4785m Mt Hubbard Mt Kennedy Ri H Mt Augusta TATES TS UNITED S 15015ft 13093ft G E Mt St. Elias 14070ft T 4577m IN 18008ft 4289m 3991m ER B 5489m NE GL WT YU A AC ON KO IE G R N LA E R C I T g O B I N S O N Haydon Peak E I R IE C R n R A R i R G A L I r 11945ft A T U E L S O I e M Katalla O Y K R R N U O 3641m G A Y C B Pt Glorious N G T R E T I A U A IE I D 5000ft N H L C S Y A LS VAL C O I S R E L G L IL 1524m R T L G Mt Cook IE A S L H A S Z G L I R L G I Y S A L L S V W 13760ft A E A O C G A H E C AG M 4194m IE B A S S R IE R Mt Seattle B R R D I E R 10070ft H L S R A Oily R FI IE K T 3069m C U A LA Lake RN G ER B GL B CHAIX AC U SUCKLING Cape IER H TORY HILLS YUKON TERRI Yakataga HILLS MBIA Y Mt Jette BRITISH COLU A T Haenke WEE B 8460ft DSM Cape Suckling Y Island 2579m GLA UIR A T CIER B N E D Y r M N IC e T A v N L i R TATSHENSHINI-ALSEK A U IS R MA R H LASPINA GLACIE S PARK K C S A N E U Y e s E L N A t C K S L UNATAK F h I N J I a O T A GULF OF ALASKA D R Y Malaspina D E N North D A Lake D S A T N A U T N E A S T W Y A E A K S B F G T Wrangell-St.
Recommended publications
  • CC O'harra Collection, Glass Lantern Slides and Glass Plate Negatives
    SDSM&T Archives: C.C. O’Harra Collection, Glass Lantern Slides and Glass Plate Negatives SDSM&T Archives Devereaux Library South Dakota School of Mines & Technology Rapid City, SD 5/25/2016 SDSM&T Archives: C.C. O’Harra Collection, Glass Lantern Slides and Glass Plate Negatives page 1 Title C.C. O’Harra Collection: Glass Lantern Slides and Glass Plate Negatives Extent 1509 items: 1227 glass lantern slides, 282 glass plate negatives; 1358 unique images Scope and Content The C.C. O’Harra Collection consists of papers, publications, photographs, maps, and files of South Dakota School of Mines president and professor Cleophus Cisney O’Harra. The Devereaux Library’s glass lantern, sometimes referred to as magic lantern, collection consists of over 1200—3 ¼“ x 4” numbered slides and vary in subject matter from geology to meteorology to campus history and include photographs, drawings and maps of international, regional and historical interest. The glass plate negatives consist of 282 plates. The plates are of two size formats—4” x 5” and 5” x 7”, and have an unprotected photo emulsion on the back side. The purpose of the items was primarily instructional. They were produced either from a stationary camera, as shown in the photo or “on site” from a more portable unit. Glass plates were the first step in the reproduction process and, as is evidenced by the notations in the margins of many of the originals, were later submitted to a commercial photo processor to be made into glass slides Provenance The glass lantern slides and glass plate negatives have been a part of the university‘s holdings for several decades.
    [Show full text]
  • North American Notes
    268 NORTH AMERICAN NOTES NORTH AMERICAN NOTES BY KENNETH A. HENDERSON HE year I 967 marked the Centennial celebration of the purchase of Alaska from Russia by the United States and the Centenary of the Articles of Confederation which formed the Canadian provinces into the Dominion of Canada. Thus both Alaska and Canada were in a mood to celebrate, and a part of this celebration was expressed · in an extremely active climbing season both in Alaska and the Yukon, where some of the highest mountains on the continent are located. While much of the officially sponsored mountaineering activity was concentrated in the border mountains between Alaska and the Yukon, there was intense activity all over Alaska as well. More information is now available on the first winter ascent of Mount McKinley mentioned in A.J. 72. 329. The team of eight was inter­ national in scope, a Frenchman, Swiss, German, Japanese, and New Zealander, the rest Americans. The successful group of three reached the summit on February 28 in typical Alaskan weather, -62° F. and winds of 35-40 knots. On their return they were stormbound at Denali Pass camp, I7,3oo ft. for seven days. For the forty days they were on the mountain temperatures averaged -35° to -40° F. (A.A.J. I6. 2I.) One of the most important attacks on McKinley in the summer of I967 was probably the three-pronged assault on the South face by the three parties under the general direction of Boyd Everett (A.A.J. I6. IO). The fourteen men flew in to the South east fork of the Kahiltna glacier on June 22 and split into three groups for the climbs.
    [Show full text]
  • Steve Mccutcheon Collection, B1990.014
    REFERENCE CODE: AkAMH REPOSITORY NAME: Anchorage Museum at Rasmuson Center Bob and Evangeline Atwood Alaska Resource Center 625 C Street Anchorage, AK 99501 Phone: 907-929-9235 Fax: 907-929-9233 Email: [email protected] Guide prepared by: Sara Piasecki, Archivist TITLE: Steve McCutcheon Collection COLLECTION NUMBER: B1990.014 OVERVIEW OF THE COLLECTION Dates: circa 1890-1990 Extent: approximately 180 linear feet Language and Scripts: The collection is in English. Name of creator(s): Steve McCutcheon, P.S. Hunt, Sydney Laurence, Lomen Brothers, Don C. Knudsen, Dolores Roguszka, Phyllis Mithassel, Alyeska Pipeline Services Co., Frank Flavin, Jim Cacia, Randy Smith, Don Horter Administrative/Biographical History: Stephen Douglas McCutcheon was born in the small town of Cordova, AK, in 1911, just three years after the first city lots were sold at auction. In 1915, the family relocated to Anchorage, which was then just a tent city thrown up to house workers on the Alaska Railroad. McCutcheon began taking photographs as a young boy, but it wasn’t until he found himself in the small town of Curry, AK, working as a night roundhouse foreman for the railroad that he set out to teach himself the art and science of photography. As a Deputy U.S. Marshall in Valdez in 1940-1941, McCutcheon honed his skills as an evidential photographer; as assistant commissioner in the state’s new Dept. of Labor, McCutcheon documented the cannery industry in Unalaska. From 1942 to 1944, he worked as district manager for the federal Office of Price Administration in Fairbanks, taking photographs of trading stations, communities and residents of northern Alaska; he sent an album of these photos to Washington, D.C., “to show them,” he said, “that things that applied in the South 48 didn’t necessarily apply to Alaska.” 1 1 Emanuel, Richard P.
    [Show full text]
  • P1616 Text-Only PDF File
    A Geologic Guide to Wrangell–Saint Elias National Park and Preserve, Alaska A Tectonic Collage of Northbound Terranes By Gary R. Winkler1 With contributions by Edward M. MacKevett, Jr.,2 George Plafker,3 Donald H. Richter,4 Danny S. Rosenkrans,5 and Henry R. Schmoll1 Introduction region—his explorations of Malaspina Glacier and Mt. St. Elias—characterized the vast mountains and glaciers whose realms he invaded with a sense of astonishment. His descrip­ Wrangell–Saint Elias National Park and Preserve (fig. tions are filled with superlatives. In the ensuing 100+ years, 6), the largest unit in the U.S. National Park System, earth scientists have learned much more about the geologic encompasses nearly 13.2 million acres of geological won­ evolution of the parklands, but the possibility of astonishment derments. Furthermore, its geologic makeup is shared with still is with us as we unravel the results of continuing tectonic contiguous Tetlin National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska, Kluane processes along the south-central Alaska continental margin. National Park and Game Sanctuary in the Yukon Territory, the Russell’s superlatives are justified: Wrangell–Saint Elias Alsek-Tatshenshini Provincial Park in British Columbia, the is, indeed, an awesome collage of geologic terranes. Most Cordova district of Chugach National Forest and the Yakutat wonderful has been the continuing discovery that the disparate district of Tongass National Forest, and Glacier Bay National terranes are, like us, invaders of a sort with unique trajectories Park and Preserve at the north end of Alaska’s panhan­ and timelines marking their northward journeys to arrive in dle—shared landscapes of awesome dimensions and classic today’s parklands.
    [Show full text]
  • Geographic Names
    GEOGRAPHIC NAMES CORRECT ORTHOGRAPHY OF GEOGRAPHIC NAMES ? REVISED TO JANUARY, 1911 WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1911 PREPARED FOR USE IN THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE BY THE UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD WASHINGTON, D. C, JANUARY, 1911 ) CORRECT ORTHOGRAPHY OF GEOGRAPHIC NAMES. The following list of geographic names includes all decisions on spelling rendered by the United States Geographic Board to and including December 7, 1910. Adopted forms are shown by bold-face type, rejected forms by italic, and revisions of previous decisions by an asterisk (*). Aalplaus ; see Alplaus. Acoma; township, McLeod County, Minn. Abagadasset; point, Kennebec River, Saga- (Not Aconia.) dahoc County, Me. (Not Abagadusset. AQores ; see Azores. Abatan; river, southwest part of Bohol, Acquasco; see Aquaseo. discharging into Maribojoc Bay. (Not Acquia; see Aquia. Abalan nor Abalon.) Acworth; railroad station and town, Cobb Aberjona; river, IVIiddlesex County, Mass. County, Ga. (Not Ackworth.) (Not Abbajona.) Adam; island, Chesapeake Bay, Dorchester Abino; point, in Canada, near east end of County, Md. (Not Adam's nor Adams.) Lake Erie. (Not Abineau nor Albino.) Adams; creek, Chatham County, Ga. (Not Aboite; railroad station, Allen County, Adams's.) Ind. (Not Aboit.) Adams; township. Warren County, Ind. AJjoo-shehr ; see Bushire. (Not J. Q. Adams.) Abookeer; AhouJcir; see Abukir. Adam's Creek; see Cunningham. Ahou Hamad; see Abu Hamed. Adams Fall; ledge in New Haven Harbor, Fall.) Abram ; creek in Grant and Mineral Coun- Conn. (Not Adam's ties, W. Va. (Not Abraham.) Adel; see Somali. Abram; see Shimmo. Adelina; town, Calvert County, Md. (Not Abruad ; see Riad. Adalina.) Absaroka; range of mountains in and near Aderhold; ferry over Chattahoochee River, Yellowstone National Park.
    [Show full text]
  • Summits on the Air – ARM for USA - Colorado (WØC)
    Summits on the Air – ARM for USA - Colorado (WØC) Summits on the Air USA - Colorado (WØC) Association Reference Manual Document Reference S46.1 Issue number 3.2 Date of issue 15-June-2021 Participation start date 01-May-2010 Authorised Date: 15-June-2021 obo SOTA Management Team Association Manager Matt Schnizer KØMOS Summits-on-the-Air an original concept by G3WGV and developed with G3CWI Notice “Summits on the Air” SOTA and the SOTA logo are trademarks of the Programme. This document is copyright of the Programme. All other trademarks and copyrights referenced herein are acknowledged. Page 1 of 11 Document S46.1 V3.2 Summits on the Air – ARM for USA - Colorado (WØC) Change Control Date Version Details 01-May-10 1.0 First formal issue of this document 01-Aug-11 2.0 Updated Version including all qualified CO Peaks, North Dakota, and South Dakota Peaks 01-Dec-11 2.1 Corrections to document for consistency between sections. 31-Mar-14 2.2 Convert WØ to WØC for Colorado only Association. Remove South Dakota and North Dakota Regions. Minor grammatical changes. Clarification of SOTA Rule 3.7.3 “Final Access”. Matt Schnizer K0MOS becomes the new W0C Association Manager. 04/30/16 2.3 Updated Disclaimer Updated 2.0 Program Derivation: Changed prominence from 500 ft to 150m (492 ft) Updated 3.0 General information: Added valid FCC license Corrected conversion factor (ft to m) and recalculated all summits 1-Apr-2017 3.0 Acquired new Summit List from ListsofJohn.com: 64 new summits (37 for P500 ft to P150 m change and 27 new) and 3 deletes due to prom corrections.
    [Show full text]
  • 1953 the Mountaineers, Inc
    fllie M®��1f�l]�r;r;m Published by Seattle, Washington..., 'December15, 1953 THE MOUNTAINEERS, INC. ITS OBJECT To explore and study the mountains, forests, and water cours­ es of the Northwest; to gather into permanent form the history and traditions of this region; to preserve by encouragement of protective legislation or otherwise, the natural beauty of North­ west America; to make expeditions into these regions in ful­ fillment of the above purposes ; to encourage a spirit of good fellowship among all lovers of out-door life. THE MOUNTAINEER LIBRARY The Club's library is one of the largest mountaineering col­ lections in the country. Books, periodicals, and pamphlets from many parts of the world are assembled for the interested reader. Mountaineering and skiing make up the largest part of the col­ lection, but travel, photography, nature study, and other allied subjects are well represented. After the period 1915 to 1926 in which The Mountaineers received books from the Bureau of Associate Mountaineering Clubs of North America, the Board of Trustees has continuously appropriated money for the main­ tenance and expansion of the library. The map collection is a valued source of information not only for planning trips and climbs, but for studying problems in other areas. NOTICE TO AUTHORS AND COMMUNICATORS Manuscripts offered for publication should be accurately typed on one side only of good, white, bond paper 81f2xll inches in size. Drawings or photographs that are intended for use as illustrations should be kept separate from the manuscript, not inserted in it, but should be transmitted at the same time.
    [Show full text]
  • Wrangell-St. Elias Alaska
    Wrangell - St. Elias National Park Service National Park and National Preserve U.S. Department of the Interior Wrangell-St. Elias Alaska The wildness of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park The Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation vest harbor seals, which feed on fish and In late summer, black and brown bears, drawn and Preserve is uncompromising, its geography Act (ANILCA) of 1980 allows the subsistence marine invertebrates. These species and many by ripening soapberries, frequent the forests awe-inspiring. Mount Wrangell, namesake of harvest of wildlife within the park, and preserve more are key foods in the subsistence diet of and gravel bars. Human history here is ancient one of the park's four mountain ranges, is an and sport hunting only in the preserve. Hunters the Ahtna and Upper Tanana Athabaskans, and relatively sparse, and has left a light imprint active volcano. Hundreds of glaciers and ice find Dall's sheep, the park's most numerous Eyak, and Tlingit peoples. Local, non-Native on the immense landscape. Even where people fields form in the high peaks, then melt into riv­ large mammal, on mountain slopes where they people also share in the bounty. continue to hunt, fish, and trap, most animal, ers and streams that drain to the Gulf of Alaska browse sedges, grasses, and forbs. Sockeye, Chi­ fish, and plant populations are healthy and self­ and the Bering Sea. Ice is a bridge that connects nook, and Coho salmon spawn in area lakes and Long, dark winters and brief, lush summers lend regulati ng. For the species who call Wrangell­ the park's geographically isolated areas.
    [Show full text]
  • GULF of ALASKA N NUN K JO a Permission Before Entering Roads And/Or Trails So You H a a NUNATAKR GLACIER K Malaspina H D the One Million Acres of Do Not Trespass
    N District Ranger Station ab Slana 4 iver es Noyes Mtn M T E T L I N L O W L A N D S Fish Lake To Delta Junction R na E jek 8147 ft N 2 on and Fairbanks y Roa TA D a Chistochina d S TETLIN NATIONAL hw er NATIONAL TA ig pp G H Co u r PRESERVE lk e n M WILDLIFE REFUGE 1 n a v Jack i e 1 r O n l r U a R G e DAWSON e Lake N Ewan ff v i v a i T R to A R n R Lake i u I v N o C a Tanada R e sn S k k e i Crosswind r b Wellesley v a o Lake Copper a T Capital Mountain e N r Lake G r Mountain r 7731 ft e Lake e Beaver Creek N v p 4960 ft Wellesley Nabesna U i p R Lake o Caution. Private T R k iv C Z RANGE Gulkana Gakona rd er e property interspersed O a fo re n San Tanada Peak C with public lands. T a I is 9358 ft a N h Drive Mt Sanford sin C k Y 16237 ft Jac Cooper Pass Mt Allen 9480 ft U R K E M I B O O Nabesna Rd C U au r N l A e Tolsona Lake Glennallen A N to N v I i L f i S 1 T L s R Mt Drum f R i G a a v A T L A C lin r e NATIONAL PRESERVE I I z ve w r r To a Ri 12010 ft N E N T a e l Mt Gordon S R S G K R t Anchorage E K 9040 ft i R E Mt Zanetti P G A h R A N P Chisana Braye I 13009 ft T Mt Jarvis O CIER W A Lakes O Tazlina C 13421 ft L Caution.
    [Show full text]
  • Long-Range Interpretive Plan, Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve
    LONG-RANGE INTERPRETIVE PLAN WRANGELL-ST ELIAS NATIONAL PARK and PRESERVE SEPTEMBER 2005 NATIONAL PARK SERVICE LONG-RANGE INTERPRETIVE PLAN WRANGELL-ST ELIAS NATIONAL PARK and PRESERVE September 2005 prepared by Department of the Interior National Park Service Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve Harpers Ferry Center Interpretive Planning TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 1 The Planning Process 2 Site Background 4 Purpose 5 Significance 6 Program Purpose and Direction 7 Primary Interpretive Themes 10 Audiences 12 Goals 16 Recommended Action Items 18 Parkwide 18 Headquarters 26 Kennecott District 42 Nabesna District 47 Overall Prioritized Action Items 51 Planning Team 56 Appendix A: Partnership Listing 57 Appendix B: Yakutat LRIP 59 Appendix C Accessibility 60 Appendix D: References Used 61 Appendix E: Existing Conditions 63 Appendix F: Park/Preserve Map 72 Appendix G: Organizational Chart 73 INTRODUCTION Alaska’s Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve is like no other in the contiguous 48 states. OUT MY WINDOW You must see it to believe it. Number and scale loom By Zoe L. Ellis Slana School, Alaska large here, magnified by splendid isolation. The largest U.S. National Park, it equals six Yellowstones, Out my window from my house on a hill, I see many things not many folks will. with peaks upon peaks and glaciers after glaciers, offering spectacular outdoor recreation There are three mountain ranges that form a nest, opportunities. Wrangell-St. Elias is an inhabited The Mentastas, Nutzotins, and Wrangells are best. The tiny white specks are really Dall sheep wilderness, where people have lived continuously for Bedded down on rock ledges, fast asleep.
    [Show full text]
  • WP18–19 Executive Summary Unit 13, Remainder
    WP18-19 WP18–19 Executive Summary Proposal WP18–19 requests that requests that the Ahtna Inter-Tribal General Description Resource Commission be allowed to distribute Federal registration permits to Ahtna tribal members for the Federal caribou season in Units 13A, 13B, and 13 remainder. The proposal also requests that the Ahtna Advisory Committee be added to the list of agencies and organizations consulted by the Bureau of Land Management Glennallen Field Office Manager when announcing the sex of the caribou to be taken in Units 13A and 13B. Submitted by: Ahtna Inter-Tribal Resource Commission. Proposed Regulation Unit— Caribou Unit 13A and 13B – 2 caribou Aug. 1 – Sept. 30 by Federal registration permit Oct. 21 – Mar. 31 only. The sex of animals that may be taken will be announced by the Glennallen Field Office Manager of the Bureau of Land Management in consultation with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game area biologist and Chairs of the Eastern Interior Regional Advisory Council and the Southcentral Regional Advisory Council and the Ahtna Advisory Committee Unit 13, remainder – 2 bulls Aug. 1 – Sept. 30 by Federal registration permit only Oct. 21 – Mar. 31 Ahtna Inter-Tribal Resource Commission will distribute (FC1302) caribou permits for tribal members only. Bureau of Land Management and Denali National Park & Preserve will distribute (FC1302) caribou permits for other Federally qualified subsistence users. Defer OSM Preliminary Conclusion Federal Subsistence Board Public Meeting April 2020 Supplemental-1 WP18-19 WP18–19 Executive Summary Support WP18-19 with modification to establish a community OSM Conclusion harvest system on Federal public lands for moose in Unit 11 and moose and caribou in Unit 13 to be managed by the AITRC and open to Federally qualified subsistence users living within the Ahtna traditional use territory, subject to a framework to be established by the Federal Subsistence Board.
    [Show full text]
  • Gazetteer of Yukon
    Gazetteer of Yukon Updated: May 1, 2021 Yukon Geographical Names Program Tourism and Culture Yukon Geographical Place Names Program The Yukon Geographical Place Names Program manages naming and renaming of Yukon places and geographical features. This includes lakes, rivers, creeks and mountains. Anyone can submit place names that reflect our diverse cultures, history and landscape. Yukon Geographical Place Names Board The Yukon Geographical Place Names Board (YGPNB) approves the applications and recommends decisions to the Minister of Tourism and Culture. The YGPNB meets at least twice a year to decide upon proposed names. The Board has six members appointed by the Minister of Tourism and Culture, three of whom are nominated by the Council of Yukon First Nations. Yukon Geographical Place Names Database The Heritage Resources Unit maintains and updates the Yukon Geographical Place Names Database of over 6,000 records. The Unit administers the program for naming and changing the names of Yukon place names and geographical features such as lakes, rivers, creek and mountains, approved by the Minister of Tourism and Culture, based on recommendations of the YGPNB. Guiding Principles The YGPNB bases its decisions on whether to recommend or rescind a particular place name to the Minister of Tourism and Culture on a number of principles and procedures first established by the Geographic Names Board of Canada. First priority shall be given to names with When proposing names for previously long-standing local usage by the general unnamed features—those for which no public, particularly indigenous names in local names exist—preference shall be the local First Nation language.
    [Show full text]