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People of Alaskas North Slope

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Title: People of Alaskas North Slope


1
People of Alaskas North Slope
  • ENVIR 450
  • July 22, 2005

2
Who lives on the North Slope?
  • From Amy Gulicks One Earth Adventures
  • http//www.oneearthadventures.com/anwr/who_lives.h
    tm

3
North Slopes harsh climate limits human
activities
  • Extreme cold winters (T
  • Availability of resources
  • Transportation and communication
  • Incorporation of modern western culture
  • Agriculture and gardening isnt possible
  • Forestry isnt possible

4
Travel and Transportation
  • Tundra is difficult terrain for travel in summer
  • Wetlands and ponds also difficult in summer
  • Most transportation is by air, snow machines in
    winter, and boats in summer

5
North Slope Borough Communities
  • No connecting roads
  • 70 Inupiaq, 17 whites, 7 Asians, 2 other
    Alaska Natives

6
North Slope Population
  • Arctic Village (not in the NSB) had 152 residents
    in 2000 (Alaska Natives, Gwichin)

7
Cost of living is HIGH!
  • 1998 typical market basket
  • Anchorage 122
  • Barrow 218
  • Outlying villages 400
  • The same high costs are generally true for most
    consumer goods

8
Standard of Living
  • NSB people must accept a lower standard of
    living, rely more on subsistence, or both
  • Arctic Village per capita income was 10,761 in
    1999

9
Coastal Inupiat
  • Archaeological evidence suggests that the Inupiat
    have occupied coastal region from Pt. Hope to
    Canadian border since 1250 AD
  • 1st contact with westerners was 1850s
    (commercial whalers and Protestant missionaries)

10
Coastal Inupiat Economy
  • 1850s Whalers hired Inupiat as crew, then
    Inupiat captained their own whaling boats
  • By 1915 commercial whaling in NSB region was
    over, but the cash economy was established
  • 1890s reindeer introduced by the US Bureau of
    Education
  • From start of 1,250 up to 600,000 by 1930s, down
    to
    population of predators, and escaped animals

11
Coastal Inupiat Economy
  • Trapping (Arctic foxes) was also short lived in
    the 1920s
  • In the 1950s-60s, wage jobs were scarce, most
    people were engaged in subsistence living

12
North Slope Subsistence
  • Coastal areas community identity closely tied to
    Bowhead whale hunting, sharing, and eating
  • caribou, birds,fish and plants are also valuable
    subsistence items
  • Subsistence isnt just about food! Its also
    about strong cultural and spiritual ties to
    resources

13
Subsistence cycles
These patterns have changed as Alaska natives
have established fixed residential bases and
incorporated new technology
14
Coastal villages
  • Pre-contact expected 4 of 5 years to have
    adequate Bowhead harvests
  • If not, put more energy into obtaining other
    resources like caribou, moose, fish, birds, etc.

15
Inland villages
  • Anaktuvak Pass (Inupiaq) and Arctic Village
    (Gwichin)
  • Caribou most important sheep, moose, fish and
    plants also taken
  • Arctic Village has especially strong ties to the
    Porcupine Caribou Herd and the coastal plain

16
Subsistence is a way of life
  • subsistence is more than the sum of harvest and
    resource procurement it is idealogical,
    value-driven and value-laden an idiom that
    defines self and community
  • Youll read more about tensions between Native
    and non-Native Alaskans surrounding subsistence
    issues in Frigid Embrace

17
The Oil Era
  • Discovery of oil in Prudhoe Bay in 1968 --North
    Americas largest oil field -- catalyzed change
    for North Slope communities
  • Increasingly moved North Slope people into the
    mainstream economy
  • It accelerated political processes for resolving
    complex issues of land claims and rights needed
    to allow development investments to go forward
  • Without settling unresolved land claims, oil
    development would have been impossible!

18
Congress passes ANSCA 1971
  • The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act
  • Established the Arctic Slope Regional Corporation
    and the village corporations and led to the
    founding fo the North Slope Borough (NSB) in 1972
  • Also called for 80 million acres of Alaskas
    Federal land to be protected as parks and
    wildlife refuges

19
Alaskas Boroughs
  • The nearest corollary in Alaska to the county
    form of government found in most other U.S.
    states is the borough. Alaska has 16 boroughs,
    which together cover less than 30 percent of the
    state. The remainder of the state's territory is
    divided into 11 census areas, which do not have
    organized borough governments due to sparse
    population.

20
The North Slope Borough
  • Larger than 39 states
  • 70 of the people are Inupiat
  • Taxes oil and gas facilities, and is responsible
    for education and public services
  • The dominant economic force in NS communities
  • Expanded services, creating jobs, expanding
    education, capital improvements (local energy
    production in Barrow) employs 61 of the work
    force only very small numbers of locals work in
    the oil fields

21
More information
  • Inupiat of Arctic Alaska http//arcticcircle.uconn
    .edu/HistoryCulture/Inupiat/
  • Gwichin People of the caribou
    http//www.alaskawild.org/campaigns_arctic_gwichin
    .html
  • ANSCA http//www.ankn.uaf.edu/ancsa.html
  • North Slope Borough http//www.north-slope.org/
  • Arctic Slope Regional Corporation
    http//www.asrc.com/intro.html

22
Cool features of Arctic landscapes
  • Permafrost, active layers, pingoes, ice wedges,
    polygon lakes http//arctic.fws.gov/permpics.htm
  • These features are dynamic

23
permafrost
  • ground that has remained frozen for at least two
    years. It forms where the winters are long and
    frigid and the ground is without a thick
    insulating layer of snow.

24
Distribution of permafrost zones
http//nsidc.org/noaa/search/indicators/soil_index
.html
25
pingoes
  • small, cone-shaped hills with hearts of ice.
    Called 'pingoes,' these low mounds are the
    result of permafrost being forced upward by the
    pressure of subterranean water

26
  • http//sts.gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/permafrost/pingoxs2.jpg

27
thermokarst
  • a pitted land surface that forms as permafrost
    melts.This typically occurs following some
    disturbance of the overlying vegetation, which
    serves as an important insulator.

Circular thermokarst ponds in peatlands, Hudson
Bay Lowlands, Manitoba. Natural Resources Canada
(http//sts.gsc.nrcan.gc.ca)
28
thermokarst
  • View of the base-of-operations for British
    Petroleum in Prudhoe Bay. To prevent melting of
    soil permafrost, base infrastructure is built on
    stilts set in a 4-ft thick gravel pad.

http//soils.ag.uidaho.edu/soilorders/gelisols_06.
htm
29
Ecological regions and vegetation types
Dry prostrate dwarf-shrub Tundar and
barrens Moist sedge, Dwarf-shrub tundra
(na) Moist tussock-sedge dwarf-shrub tundra (a,
s) Moist tussock-sedge, shrub tundra (ns, na)
Shrub tundra and other shrublands Wet sedge
tundra Water Ice Shadows, no data
Also see http//www.absc.usgs.gov/1002/section2.ht
m
30
Key influences on North slope vegetation
  • Topography
  • Soils acidity (pH) varies considerably, sand
    content and drainage varies
  • Climate varies with distance from the coast
  • Along the Beaufort Sea coast, July avg T 4-7 ºC
  • Coastal plain (inland) July avg T 7-9 ºC
  • Foothills July avg T 9-12 ºC
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