Contributions of the United States Geological Survey to the Documentation of Alaska Native Names, 1950–75

Abstract The mapping of Alaska, primarily at the beginning of the twentieth century· and again just after the middle of the century, documented thousands of native-language placenames. A recent study of the placenames of a 3,800-square-mile area centered on the Stevens Village ancestral lands adjace...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Names
Main Author: James Kari
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1179/nam.2000.48.3-4.193
https://doaj.org/article/1011f05a55ca4e5ab242811f4edd2d92
Description
Summary:Abstract The mapping of Alaska, primarily at the beginning of the twentieth century· and again just after the middle of the century, documented thousands of native-language placenames. A recent study of the placenames of a 3,800-square-mile area centered on the Stevens Village ancestral lands adjacent to the Yukon River provided the correct forms of more than 200 Athabaskan placenames, and rescued much of the oral system that had fallen into disuse. A systematic review should be undertaken of the approximately 3,000 Alaska native names collected in the 1950-75 period so that more accurate versions could be considered for adoption. An essential resource for such a review is Donald Orth's 1967 Dictionary of Alaska Place Names, which provides precise citations of sources.