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ULUS ARE TRADITIONAL HUNTING KNIVES USED FOR CENTURIES BY THE
                YUP’IK PEOPLE TO CLEAN FISH AND SKIN GAME.
                ERIKA LARSEN/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC IMAGE COLLECTION




                Around a.d. 1400 communities moved up the
                coastal rivers, including the Yukon, to form set-
                tlements farther inland.
                  Rather than the frigid northern lands of what
                is now Alaska, the climate in these areas was
                milder. The waterways supplied the Yup’ik
                with food; from the shore or within their kay-
                aks, hunters used harpoons or bows and arrows
                to catch salmon and hunt mammals. During the

                year, people would travel to different seasonal
                camps to harvest different food sources. In the
                colder months, they would shelter in structures
                made out of earth.
                  It was around the perimeter of what was once
                one of these large sod structures that Knecht and
                his team of archaeologists made an astonishing

                find. They uncovered traces of a centuries-old fire
                that was used to smoke out the residents—some
                50 people, probably an alliance of extended fami-
                lies, who lived here when they weren’t out
                hunting, fishing, and gathering
                plants. No one, it seems,
                was spared.













                                            BOW, ARROWS, QUIVER, AND CASE
                                            19TH CENTURY, YUP’IK PEOPLE, YUKON
                                            RIVER DELTA, ALASKA
                                            NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN,
                                            SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
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