A website directory and metasearch engine of Top 20 best websites
Top 20  
Online  
 
 
Add To Favorites Make this your Start Page Top 20 from A-Z
 
Top 20 Directory
Listen to Music Now
 Classical
 Country    Jazz
 Oldies    Top 40
 Ambient    NPR
AccuRadio
Windows  |   Launch
Radio Tower  |  AOL

Top20Listen

Local Google Maps Y! AOL City Search Ticket Master Zip Phone/E-Mail
Top 20 City Guides Top 20 State Guides Top 20 Nation Guides
Metasearch Links:   
Google Yahoo MSN Ask Answers ixquick DMOZ About
Wikipedia Encarta Y! News Y! Video AV Images Blogs Top 20
 
See also Hakia Sidekiq Clusty Other Images Google ASK Flickr News Google NYT BBC
Directories Y! Google Alexa Almanac Archive Videos Google YouTube AOL MSN ASK
 
Diversions
of the week
Food Trivia
Shark vs Octopus
Harvesting Seeds
Human Mirror
Bad Apple Game
Archive

Top20Diversions

 
Top 20 Directory:
Top : Regional : North_America : United_States : Alaska : Arts_and_Entertainment : Cultural
  • Fairbanks Native Culture@

    Sites:
  • A Journey to Native Alaska: A personal account of a young man's journey to a small Eskimo village in Alaska. Includes article, pictures, and links.
  • Alaska Historical Society: The official site of the Alaska Historical Society, home to information about Alaska history and local historical societies throughout the state.
  • Alaska Native Knowledge Network: designed to serve as a resource for compiling and exchanging information related to Alaska Native knowledge systems and ways of knowing.
  • Alaska's Many Cultures: Alaskans are the children of many nations. The legacy of Inupiat and Yupik Eskimos, Aleuts, and Athabascan, Haida, Tlingit, and Tsimshian Indians. The descendants of Russians, and rugged prospectors.
  • Alaska: The Great Land at nationalgeographic.com: Explore Alaska's land, wildlife, history, and people.
  • Aleut and Alutiiq Culture of the Aleutian Region: Information and links to Aleution culture.
  • ANILCA - Title 8: §801. The Congress finds and declares that -- (1) the continuation of the opportunity for subsistence uses by rural residents of Alaska, including both Natives and non-Natives, on the public lands and by Alaska Natives on Native lands is essential to Native physical, economic, traditional, and cultural existence and to non-Native physical, economic, traditional, and social existence;
  • Archaeology of the Tundra and Arctic Alaska: In an area stretching along the coastline from Bristol Bay and the Alaska Peninsula, along the Bering Sea and Chukchi Sea coasts, northward around Alaska, and eastwards across the arctic all the way to Greenland, the coastline is ice-bound in winter and the terrain is generally treeless. In this zone, which can be up to several hundred kilometers broad, developed much of the culture of modern Eskimo (Inupiat and Yupik in Alaska) peoples.
  • Arctic Circle: History and Culture: Various information, links to history and culture of the Arctic.
  • Arctic Studies Center: Dedicated to the study of northern peoples, their history and environment. Links, pictures and information.
  • Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska: Current issues, related programs, services offered, events and schedules, and contact information.
  • Crossroads of Continents: Human populations began moving into Northeastern Siberia over sixteen thousand years ago from the more temperate regions of eastern Asia, spreading north and east with the passing of the last Ice Age until they crossed into the Americas via Alaska. That great migration was only the beginning of the story.
  • Gallery yupik, Yup'ik Recollections of Past Shaman: From the Arctic to the Amazon, this symposium explores masks and masking ceremonies, and their roles in transformation and the religions of the Americas.
  • Kaktovik, Alaska: Learn about life in an arctic village, Eskimo culture and tradition.
  • Kodiak: Official Visitors Guide - Alutiiq People of Kodiak Island.
  • Native American Rights Fund: 1867 - The United States purchased Alaska from Russia. The Treaty of Cession required that Alaska's Natives were "not to be disturbed" in their use and occupancy of their traditional lands.
  • The Chilkat Blanket: The art of Chilkat Blanket weaving originated with the Tsimshian people (near Wrangell) but later spread to the Tlingits through trade and marriage. These blankets, requiring a year of hard work to make, were highly sought by northwest coast Indian nobility long before the first explorers came to this region.
  • The Russian Church and Native Alaskan Cultures: Dr. Vyacheslav Ivanov, one of the foremost linguists of our day, reviews and evaluates the Alaskan Russian Church Archives.
  • Tlingit National Anthem: Alaska Natives Online: Cultural links for Alaska Native and American Indian history, art, culture, flags, celebrities, music, storytelling, dance, photographs, languages, and media.
  • Yupik Visor: Wooden hats and visors were used by native Alaskan hunters, from the Yupik-speaking coastal dwellers south to the Aleutian Islanders.


    Listed links may put this banner on their website.

    Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
    Submit a Site  -  Open Directory Project  -  Become an Editor
    Terms and Conditions
    About Us
    Privacy Policy

    Processing Time: 0.01