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A WELL-PRESERVED FISHING LINE FRESHLY UNCOVERED AT THE
                NUNALLEQ SITE IN COASTAL ALASKA DATES TO THE 1600S.
                ERIKA LARSEN/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC IMAGE COLLECTION




                            he archaeological site of Nunalleq on
                            the southwest coast of Alaska pre-
                            serves a fateful moment, frozen in
                            time. The muddy square of earth is
               Tfull of everyday things that the In-
                digenous Yup’ik people used to survive and to
                celebrate life here, all left just as they lay when
                a deadly attack came almost four centuries ago.
                  As is often the case in archaeology, a tragedy

                of long ago is a boon to modern science. Ar-
                chaeologists have recovered 100,000 artifacts
                at Nunalleq, from typical eating utensils to ex-
                traordinary things such as wooden ritual masks,
                ivory tattoo needles, pieces of finely calibrated
                sea kayaks, and a belt of caribou teeth. Beyond
                the sheer quantity and variety, the objects are

                astonishingly well preserved, having been frozen
                in the ground since about 1660.
                  The ground’s frigid state even preserved rare
                organic material such as grass ropes, salmon-
                berry seeds, head lice, and grass strands woven
                into baskets. “This grass was cut when Shake-
                speare walked the Earth,” observed lead archaeol-
                ogist Rick Knecht, of the University of Aberdeen

                in Scotland.


                Land of the Yup’ik
                Archaeologists believe the Yup’ik people’s an-
                cestors originated in eastern Siberia and Asia.
                They first crossed the Bering Sea to North
                America around 10,000 years ago and gradually

                moved into the coastal areas of western Alaska.


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