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General Information | |
| Where is Nome? | ||
| How to get to Nome? | ||
| History of Nome | ||
| Eskimo Culture | ||
| Climate & Daylight | ||
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Alaska is still the last frontier in the minds of many Americans. Interest in the "Great Land" has increased sharply since Alaska became a full fledged state in January o f 1959. In spite of this great interest, many Americans know very little of the Eskimos, Indians and Aleuts (Al-ee-oots) who live in the remote regions. At the time Alaska was discovered in 1741 by Vitus Bering, Alaska Natives populated all parts of Alaska including the Bering Strait Region. Although there is still some disagreement among anthropologists concerning the origin of the American Indians and Eskimos, the great majority believe that these people migrated across the Bering Strait from Asia. Apparently this migration occurred in successive waves over thousands of years. The northern Eskimo groups appear to be the most recent immigrants and have settled along the coast of the Arctic Ocean from Little Diomede Island to Greenland.
The impact of the 20th Century culture has brought many changes among
all the Native people, some good and some unfortunate. As a result, most
Eskimos and Indians live in a dual cash based and traditional lifestyle.
Of this number, 62 percent of Alaska Natives (about 52,000) live in rural Alaska. The Bering Straits Region is located in Northwest Alaska, just south of the Arctic Circle. picture above: "Native Woman" © Paul Yost, 1941 The regional boundaries extend 230 miles east to west and 230 miles north to south and encompass an area of over 26,000 square miles, roughly the size of the state of West Virginia. There are three culturally distinct groups of Inuit people who inhabit the region. Inupiat reside on the Seward Peninsula and the King and Diomede Islands. The Central Yupik primarily reside in the villages south of Unalakleet, and Siberian Yupik live on St. Lawrence Island. The latter group is closely related culturally and linguistically to Chukotka people of the Russian Far East. The Eskimo people have lived in this region as an identifiable culture for at least 3,000 years; the earliest documented evidence of human habitation dates back I 0,000 to I 1,000 years. Settlements concentrate along the coast and river systems, for the sea was and is the principal focus of human activities. The population of the Bering Straits Region is approximately 8,890. Eskimos comprise 78% of the population (6,962). There are 17 year-round village settlements in the region that range in population from 123 to 646. Nome is the largest community in the region and has roughly 3,900 people. Nome is the transportation, government and service hub for the region. The city of Nome has different ethnic, social and economic features than the villages. Only a little over a half of Nome's residents are Natives, while in most villages, 90% to 95% of residents are Native.
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Bering Straits Native Corp. P.O. Box 1008, (907) 443-5252 King Island Native Corp., P.O. Box 992, (907) 443-5494 Sitnasuak Native Corp., P.O. Box 905, (907) 443-2632 Kawerak, Inc., P.O. Box 948, (907) 443-5231 Nome Eskimo Community, P.O. Box 1090, (907) 443-2246
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Nome
Convention and Visitors Bureau Tel: (907) 443-6624, Fax: (907) 443-5832 Home Design by ©2001 Prisma Design & Photography Rev 06/01/01 |