• Search in Site

Search in Site

Alaska Native News

  • HOME
  • Featured
  • General
  • World
  • National
  • State
  • Rural
  • Arctic
  • Science/Education
  • Health
  • At Sea
  • Politics
  • Weather
  • Tides
  • Entertainment
    • Daily Crossword/Sudoku
    • Comics
  • Opinions/Op/Ed/Letters
    • Op/Ed and the Editor
    • Submit Press Release, OP/ED or Letter to the Editor
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • North Slope/Northwest Alaska
  • Interior Alaska
  • Southwest Alaska
  • Southcentral
  • Southeast Alaska
  • This Day in Alaskan and U.S. History
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Alaska
  4. /
  5. Page 1641
Home»Posts tagged with»Alaska (Page 1641)

Alutiiq Word of the Week April 20

By Alutiiq Museum on Apr 20, 2014   Alutiiq Word of the Week & Museum News  

Alutiiq Word of the Week April 20

  PRiis’tanaq – Dock PaRaguutat pRiistananun taitaartut. – The boats come to the dock. (Click sentence to hear Alutiiq words spoken.) In Alutiiq communities, where boats are essential for travel, subsistence activities, and work at sea, docks are a necessity. Although Alutiiqs once landed their skin-covered boats on the beach and stored them around their […]

Alaska Science Forum: Riding the bumps of the far northern trail

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Apr 17, 2014   The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Alaska Science Forum: Riding the bumps of the far northern trail

WEST OF NUIQSUT — A sick snowmachine awaits rescue here on the snow-covered ice of this boot-shaped lake. After an 85-mile journey from our last stop at Umiat, one of the Ski Doo Skandics sputtered to a crawl a few miles from our intended campsite here. The loss of one of their essential research tools […]

ACUASI Leads the Way Toward Public use of Unmanned Aircraft

By Diana Campbell | Geophysical Institute Public Relations on Apr 14, 2014   The Arctic and Alaska Science  

ACUASI Leads the Way Toward Public use of Unmanned Aircraft

Eyal Saiet’s job is looking for the sweet spot—that connection between machine and science that makes sense. For instance, Saiet is thinking of flying an unmanned aircraft through the blow of a surfacing bowhead whale to collect mucus samples. The samples will tell biologists the health, sex and fertility of the migrating behemoth returning to […]

Summer Comes Early in the Far North

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Apr 10, 2014   The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Summer Comes Early in the Far North

TOOLIK FIELD STATION — Despite a wind that makes today’s minus 14 degrees Fahrenheit feel like minus 39, a worker at this research camp in blue-white hills north of the Brooks Range has proclaimed this the first day of summer. Today, the population of Toolik Field Station increases from nine — five people running the […]

« Previous 1 … 1,639 1,640 1,641 1,642 Next »



  • Advertise with Us
  • Submit Press Release, OP/ED or Letter to the Editor
  • Contact Alaska Native News
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
© 2026, ↑ Alaska Native News