1979.
Introduces the natural environment, history, culture, and day-to-day life of the Eskimos.
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©1980.
A history of Alaska from the arrival of its native peoples to the building of the oil pipeline in the 1970's, with special emphasis on its Russia
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c1998.
Explores what it was like to live in Alaska from 1867, when the land was purchased from the Russians, until the territory achieved statehood in 1
Book
1994.
Art activities include work with leather, whale bone, abalone, fox fur, bark, antler, trade beads, baleen, fish skin, feathers, grass and sinew.
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©1983.
Twelve-year-old Esther Atoolik tells of the last winter her people spent on King Island, Alaska, in the early 1960's.
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c1992.
Describes, in text and photographs, the home, family, school, and day-to-day life of a seven-year-old Eskimo boy living in a small village in Ala
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1959.
Paul Green (Aknik) tells of his life growing up in an Eskimo village in Alaska. Accompanying these remembrances are line drawings by Native Ekimo
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2001.
Traces the life of Neeluk and his family through one year in the 1800s in the Arctic land that would later become the state of Alaska.
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[1974]
A collection of 35 folk tales from the Eskimos of Alaska's Seward Peninsula.
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1989.
Text and photographs document the life of a Yup'ik Eskimo family, residents of a small Alaskan town on the coast of the Bering Sea, detailing the
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