ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND—More than 50,000 artifacts recovered from a site on the southwestern coast of Alaska will be sent back to the area after having been preserved by archaeologists at the University of Aberdeen, according to a report from BBC News. The artifacts, most made of wood and other organic materials, were in danger of degrading due to melting permafrost and coastal erosion at the site, known as Nunalleq. The materials date back hundreds of years and include extraordinarily well-preserved wooden masks used by the local Yup’ik people in dance rituals. The team, led by archaeologist Rick Knecht, spent seven years unearthing and preserving the artifacts. Once they are returned to Alaska, they will be displayed at a new culture and archaeology center. According to Knecht, the collection is among the largest ever to have been recovered from a single site in Alaska—and perhaps the Arctic as a whole. To read in-depth about the excavation at Nunalleq, go to “Cultural Revival.”
Huge Collection of Alaskan Artifacts Preserved
News May 23, 2017
Recommended Articles
Letter from Alaska July/August 2021
The Cold Winds of War
A little-known World War II campaign in the Aleutian Islands left behind an undisturbed battlefield strewn with weapons and materiel
Features September/October 2015
Cultural Revival
Excavations near a Yup’ik village in Alaska are helping its people reconnect with the epic stories and practices of their ancestors
Off the Grid May/June 2012
Klondike River, Canada
Features November/December 2024
Let the Games Begin
How gladiators in ancient Anatolia lived to entertain the masses
-
Features March/April 2017
Kings of Cooperation
The Olmec city of Tres Zapotes may have owed its longevity to a new form of government
(De Agostini Picture Library/Getty Images) -
Features March/April 2017
The Road Almost Taken
An ancient city in Germany tells a different story of the Roman conquest
(© Courtesy Gabriele Rasbach, DAI) -
Letter from Philadelphia March/April 2017
Empire of Glass
An unusual industrial history emerges from some of the city’s hippest neighborhoods
(Courtesy AECOM, Digging I-95) -
Artifacts March/April 2017
Middle Bronze Age Jug
(Courtesy Clara Amit)