Archeologists rush to save Yup'ik treasures threatened by vanishing shoreline
My sister-in-law, Tricia Gillam, has been working on this project for quite a while now, and is mentioned in this article. This is a very important find, and the rush is on to save these artifacts from the encroaching ocean. (Cross-posted in Environment.)
http://www.adn.com/article/20140830/archaeologists-rush-save-yupik-treasures-threatened-vanishing-shoreline
QUINHAGAK -- On the eroding Bering Sea coast of far Western Alaska, archaeologists from around the world are unearthing remnants of an ancient Yupik village frozen in place for hundreds of years.
Archaeologists involved say its the biggest excavation of Yupik artifacts from before the arrival of Russians and other Europeans in the early 1800s. The research is taking place in this remote Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta village as well as labs in Europe, Canada and the United States. A leading anthropologist last week sat down with elders to see what they can tell about the finds from stories passed down over generations.
In a region where tradition says old treasures should remain undisturbed, the Yupik people of Quinhagak invited the archaeologists in.
Why? Because we had nothing, said Warren Jones, president of the village corporation, Qanirtuuq Inc., which owns the dig site land. Cultural elements, including language and traditional dance, were stifled by the Moravian missionaries and nearly lost, said Jones, a behind-the-scenes leader in Quinhagak, home to about 700 people on Kuskokwim Bay some 70 miles southwest of Bethel.
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