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FINELY CRAFTED JEWELRY, SUCH AS THESE IVORY EARRINGS (ABOVE), WAS A
                COMMON FIND AMONG THE ARTIFACTS FROM THE NUNALLEQ SITE.
                ERIKA LARSEN/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC IMAGE COLLECTION



                wave damage now that the thawing permafrost

                is making the land sink. “One good winter storm
                and we could lose this whole site,” says Knecht.
                  He speaks from experience. Since the start of
                the excavation, the relentless action of the sea
                has torn about 35 feet from the edge of the site.
                The winter after the 2010 dig was particularly
                brutal. Residents of Quinhagak remember huge
                chunks of ice slamming into the coast. By the
                time Knecht and his crew returned, the entire

                area they had excavated was gone. Since then, the
                sense of urgency has only increased.
                  Archaeology’s potential to inspire an appreci-
                ation for the past is what motivated Jones to start
                the dig. When wooden artifacts began washing
                up on the beach, he invited Knecht to assess the
                eroding site, then helped convince the village’s

                board of directors that excavating Nunalleq was
                a good idea. Their meeting grew into a unique
                collaboration in which the community and the
                visiting archaeologists work as partners.
                  Jones is proud of the partnership that made
                this possible. He also looks forward to more
                discoveries at the site and sees a promising fu-
                                    ture for the center. “I want

                                    our kids who are in college
                                    now to run [the center] and
                                    be proud that it’s ours.”




                                    Portions of this article appear in Lost Cities,
                                    Ancient Tombs, edited by Ann R. Williams.
                                    Copyright © 2021 by National Geographic
                                    Partners. Reprinted by permission of National
                                    Geographic Partners.


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