| Alaska Regional Office | U.S. Department of the Interior | |||||
| Cultural Resources Team | National Park Service |
| National
Historic Landmarks in Alaska |
Birnirk
Site, North Slope Borough (near Barrow) |
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Barrow, Alaska |
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| National
Register Number: 66000953 Resource Type: Site Property Type: Religion - Ceremonial site Designated: December 29, 1962 |
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Composed of a group of 16 mounds arranged in rows roughly parallel to the beach, this site is associated with the Birnirk and Thule cultures, both belonging to the North Alaskan branch of the Northern Maritime tradition, the earliest manifestation of the Eskimo culture in North Alaska. Birnirk, a few miles outside
Barrow, was a small village that dates back to about 500 A.D. The people
here were among the earliest who lived in the same way as the modern whale
and seal-hunting people of Alaska’s Arctic Coast. The lagoon, the
land, and the sea near the village was a prehistoric supermarket, offering
the villagers whales, walrus, seals, fish, waterfowl, and caribou. There’s
still a summer hunting camp at Birnirk today. |
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