Pre-Contact Village Yields Yup’ik Treasures

News August 26, 2013

(University of Aberdeen)
SHARE:
USA Yupiit exhibition
(University of Aberdeen)

ANCHORAGE, ALASKA—Over the past five years, a partnership between the village of Quinhagak, located near the Bering Sea, and Scotland’s
University of Aberdeen has uncovered thousands of artifacts from an Alaskan village dating to the days before European contact. Many of the objects date between 1350 and 1670, a time little understood by scholars. “This is easily the largest collection of pre-contact Yup’ik material anywhere,” said anthropologist Rick Knecht. “Because it’s been in permafrost until now, the level of preservation is just marvelous. Eighty percent of what we’re finding is wood or other organics. A lot of them are preserved to the extent that they still have original paint on them,” he explained. Some of the remarkable finds include sealskin clothing, grass basketry, and ropes made from grass and roots. Knecht estimates that only a quarter of the site remains because of the shifting banks and eroding shoreline of the Arolik River. “It’s kind of an emergency,” he added.

  • Features July/August 2013

    The First Vikings

    Two remarkable ships may show that the Viking storm was brewing long before their assault on England and the continent

    Read Article
    Courtesy Liina Maldre, University of Tallinn
  • Features July/August 2013

    Miniature Pyramids of Sudan

    Archaeologists excavating on the banks of the Nile have uncovered a necropolis where hundreds of small pyramids once stood

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Vincent Francigny/SEDAU)
  • Letter from China July/August 2013

    Tomb Raider Chronicles

    Looting reaches across the centuries—and modern China’s economic strata

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Lauren Hilgers, Photo: Anonymous)
  • Artifacts July/August 2013

    Ancient Egyptian Sundial

    A 13th-century limestone sundial is one of the earliest timekeeping devices discovered in Egypt

    Read Article
    (© The Trustees of the British Museum/Art Resource, NY)