Difference between revisions of "Yupik" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
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* Mithun, Marianne. ''The languages of Native North America''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 0521232287
 
* Mithun, Marianne. ''The languages of Native North America''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 0521232287
 
* de Reuse, Willem J. ''Siberian Yupik Eskimo: The language and its contacts with Chukchi''. Studies in indigenous languages of the Americas. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1994. ISBN 0874803977
 
* de Reuse, Willem J. ''Siberian Yupik Eskimo: The language and its contacts with Chukchi''. Studies in indigenous languages of the Americas. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1994. ISBN 0874803977
* Kleivan, Inge, and B. Sonne. ''Eskimos: Greenland and Canada, Iconography of Religions''. Leiden, The Netherlands: Institute of Religious Iconography, State University Groningen, 1985. ISBN 9004071601
+
* Kleivan, Inge, and B. Sonne. ''Eskimos, Greenland and Canada (Iconography of Religions Section 8 - Arctic Peoples)''. Brill Academic Publishers, 1997. ISBN 9004071601
 
* Merkur, Daniel. ''Becoming Half Hidden: Shamanism and Initiation among the Inuit''. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell, 1985. ISBN 9122007520
 
* Merkur, Daniel. ''Becoming Half Hidden: Shamanism and Initiation among the Inuit''. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell, 1985. ISBN 9122007520
 
* Burch, Ernest S. (junior) and Werner Forman. ''The Eskimos''. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1988. ISBN 0806121262
 
* Burch, Ernest S. (junior) and Werner Forman. ''The Eskimos''. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1988. ISBN 0806121262

Revision as of 21:40, 11 July 2008


Yupik
Edward S. Curtis Collection People 008.jpg
Total population
21,000
Regions with significant populations
Flag of United States USA
Flag of Russia Russia
Languages
Yupik languages, English, Russian (in Siberia)
Religions
Christianity (mostly Russian Orthodox), Shamanism
Related ethnic groups
Inuit, Sirenik, Aleut

The Yupik or, in the Central Alaskan Yup'ik language, Yup'ik, are a group of indigenous or aboriginal peoples of western, southwestern, and southcentral Alaska and the Russian Far East. They include the Central Alaskan Yup'ik people of the Yukon-Kuskokwim delta, the Kuskokwim River, and coastal Bristol Bay in Alaska; the Alutiiq (or Suqpiaq) of the Alaska Peninsula and coastal and island areas of southcentral Alaska; and the Siberian Yupik of the Russian Far East and St. Lawrence Island in western Alaska. They are Eskimo and are related to the Inuit.

The Central Alaskan Yup'ik are by far the most numerous group of Yupik. The Central Alaskan Yup'ik who live on Nunivak Island call themselves Cup'ig (plural Cup'it). Those who live in the village of Chevak call themselves Cup'ik (plural Cup'it).

Culture

Boys in kaiak - Nunivak from The North American Indian by Edward S. Curtis.

Traditionally, families spent the spring and summer at fish camp, then joined with others at village sites for the winter. Many families still harvest the traditional subsistence resources, especially salmon and seal.

The men's communal house, the qasgiq, was the community center for ceremonies and festivals which included singing, dancing, and storytelling. The qasgiq was used mainly in the winter months, because people would travel in family groups following food sources throughout the spring, summer, and fall months. Aside from ceremonies and festivals, it was also where the men taught the young boys survival and hunting skills, as well as other life lessons. The young boys were also taught how to make tools and qayaqs (kayaks) during the winter months in the qasgiq. There is also a shaman involved in the ceremonies.

A Yupik mask

The women's house, the ena, was traditionally right next door, and in some areas they were connected by a tunnel. Women taught the young girls how to sew, cook, and weave. Boys would live with their mothers until they were about five years old, then they would live in the qasgiq. Each winter, from anywhere between three to six weeks, the young boys and young girls would switch, with the men teaching the girls survival and hunting skills and toolmaking and the women teaching the boys how to sew and cook.

Yup'ik group dances are often with individuals staying stationary, with all the movement done with rhythmic upper body and arm movements accentuated with hand held dance fans very similar to Cherokee dance fans. The limited movement area by no means limits the expressiveness of the dances, which cover the whole range from graceful flowing to energetically lively to wryly humorous.

The Yup'ik are unique among native peoples of the Americas in that children are named after the last person in the community to have died, whether that name be a boy or girl name.

Languages

The five Yupik languages (related to Inuktitut) are still very widely spoken, with more than 75 percent of the Yupik/Yup'ik population fluent in the language.

The Alaskan and Siberian Yupik, like the Alaskan Inupiat, adopted the system of writing developed by Moravian missionaries during the 1760s in Greenland. The Alaskan Yupik and Inupiat are the only Northern indigenous peoples to have developed their own system of hieroglyphics, a system that died with its inventors.[1]

Through a confusion among Russian explorers in the 1800s, the Yupik people bordering the territory of the unrelated Aleuts were erroneously called Aleuts, or Alutiiq, in Yupik. This term has remained in use to the present day, along with another term, Sugpiaq, which both refer to the Yupik of Southcentral Alaska and Kodiak.

Shamanism

Many indigenous cultures had persons acting as mediators with the spirit world, contacting the various entities (spirits, souls, and mythological beings) that populate the universe of their belief system.[2] These were usually termed “shamans” in the literature, although the term as such was not necessarily used in the local language. For example, the Siberian Yupik called these mediators /aˈliɣnalʁi/, which is translated as "shaman" in both Russian and English literature.[3][4][5] Siberian Yupiks stressed the importance of maintaining good relationship with sea animals.[6] Ungazigmit people (the largest of Siberian Yupik variants) had /aˈliɣnalʁi/s, who received presents for the shamanizing, healing. This payment had a special name, /aˈkiliːɕaq/—in their language, there were many words for the different kinds of presents and payments and this was one of them.[7] (The many kinds of presents and the words designating them were related to the culture: fests, marriage etc.[7]; or made such fine distinctions like “thing, given to someone who has none,” “thing, given, not begged for,” “thing, given to someone as to anybody else,” “thing, given for exchange” etc.[8]).

Birket-Smith conducted fieldwork among them in the 1950s, by which time shamanism was already extinct. As among other Eskimo groups, Chugach apprentice shamans were not forced to become shamans by the spirits, but instead deliberately visited lonely places and walked for many days as part of a vision quest that resulted in the visitation of a spirit. The apprentice passed out, and the spirit took him or her to another place (like the mountains or the depths of the sea). Whilst there, the spirit instructed the apprentice in their calling, such as teaching them the shaman’s song.[9]

Alutiiq

Alutiiq dancer

The Alutiiq (plural: Alutiit), also called Pacific Yupik or Sugpiaq, are a southern coastal people of the Yupik peoples of Alaska. Their language is also called Alutiiq. They are not to be confused with the Aleuts, who live further to the southwest, including along the Aleutian Islands. They traditionally lived a coastal lifestyle, subsisting primarily on ocean resources such as salmon, halibut, and whale, as well as rich land resources such as berries and land mammals. Before European contact with Russian fur traders, the Alutiiq lived in semi-subterranean homes called barabaras. The Alutiiq today live in coastal fishing communities, where they work in all aspects of the modern economy, while also maintaining the cultural value of subsistence.

Notable contemporary Alutiiq include painter and sculptor, Alvin Eli Amason, and Sven Haakanson, executive director of the Alutiiq Museum, and winner of a 2007 MacArthur Fellowship.[10]

Chugach

Chugach man in traditional dress

Chugach (pronounced /ˈtʃuːgætʃ/) is the name of an Alaska Native culture and group of people in the region of the Kenai Peninsula and Prince William Sound. The Chugach people are an Alutiiq (Pacific Eskimo) people who speak the Chugach dialect of the Alutiiq language.

The Chugach people gave their name to Chugach National Forest, the Chugach Mountains, and Alaska's Chugach State Park, all located in or near the traditional range of the Chugach people in southcentral Alaska. Chugach Alaska Corporation, an Alaska Native regional corporation created under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971, also derives its name from the Chugach people, many of whom are shareholders of the corporation.

In 1964, a tsunami generated by the Good Friday Earthquake destroyed the Chugach village of Chenega, Alaska.

Siberian Yupik

A Siberian Yupik woman holding walrus tusks. Photo: Nabogatova

Siberian Yupiks, or Yuits, are indigenous people who reside along the coast of the Chukchi Peninsula in the far northeast of the Russian Federation and on St. Lawrence Island in Alaska. They speak Central Siberian Yupik (also known as Yuit), a Yupik language of the Eskimo-Aleut family of languages.

They were also known as Siberian Eskimo or Yupiks. The name Yuit (Юит, plural: Юиты) was officially assigned to them in 1931, at the brief time of the campaign of support of indigenous cultures in the Soviet Union.

Also Sireniki Eskimos live in that area, but their extinct language, Sireniki Eskimo, shows many peculiarities among Eskimo languages. It is even mutually unintelligible with the neighboring Siberian Yupik languages.[11]

Culture

The Siberian Yupik on St. Lawrence Island live in the villages of Savoonga and Gambell, and are widely known for their skillful carvings of walrus ivory and whale bone, as well as the baleen of bowhead whales. These even include some “moving sculptures” with complicated pulleys animating scenes such as walrus hunting or traditional dances.

Yaranga

The largest of Siberian Yupik peoples, the Chaplino Eskimos (Ungazigmit) had a round, dome-shaped building for winter. It is called "yaranga" in the literature, the same word referring also to the similar building of the Chukchi. In the language of Chaplino Eskimos (the largest of Siberian Yupik languages), its name was /mɨŋtˈtɨʁaq/.[12] Its framework was made of posts.[13] Canvas was be used for the covering the framework. The yaranga was surrounded by sod or planking at the lower part. There was a smaller cabin inside it at its back part, used for sleeping and living. It was separated from the outer, cooler parts of the yaranga with haired reindeer skins and grass, supported by a cage-like framework. In their own language, it was called /aːɣra/, a word borrowed from Chukchi language. But the household works were done in the room of the yaranga in front of this inner building, and also many household utensils were kept there. In winter storms, and at night also the dogs were there.

The winter building of Siberian Yupik, called also "yaranga" in the literature, was a round, dome-shaped building. In the language of Chaplino Eskimos (Ungazigmit), its name was "mintigak." Its framework was made of posts. In the middle of the twentieth century, following external influence, also canvas could be used for the covering the framework. The yaranga was surrounded by sod or planking at the lower part. There was another smaller building inside it, used for sleeping and living. Household works were done in the room surrounding this inner building, and also many household utensils were kept there.[14] There were also other types of buildings for summer.[15]

Name-giving

Similarly to several other Eskimo cultures, the name-giving of a newborn baby among Siberian Yupik meant that a deceased person was affected, a certain rebirth was believed. Even before the birth of the baby, careful investigations took place: dreams, events were analyzed. After the birth, the baby's physical traits were compared to those of the deceased person. The name was important: if the baby died, it was thought that he/she has not given the "right" name. In case of sickness, it was hoped that giving additional names could result in healing.[16]

Amulets

Amulets could be manifested in many forms, and could protect the person wearing them or the entire family, and there were also hunting amulets. Some examples:

  • a head of raven hanging on the entrance of the house, functioning as a familiar amulet[17];
  • figures carved out of stone in shape of walrus head or dog head, worn as individual amulets;[18]
  • hunting amulets were attached to something or worn.[19] About the effige of orca on the tools of the marine hunter[5], see the beliefs concerning this peculiar marine mammal below.

Concepts about the animal world around them

The orca, wolf, raven, spider, and whale were revered animals. Also folklore examples demonstrate this. For example, a spider saves the life of a girl.[20][21] The motif of spider as a benevolent personage, saving people from peril with its cobweb, lifting them up to the sky in danger, is present also in many tales of Sireniki Eskimos.[22]

It was thought that the prey of the marine hunt could return to the sea and become a complete animal again. That is why they did not break the bones, only cut them at the joints.[23]

Orca and wolf

In the tales and beliefs of this people, wolf and orca are thought to be identical: orca can become a wolf or vice versa. In winter, they appear in the form of wolf, in summer, in the form of orca.[24][25][5][6] Orca was believed to help people in hunting on the sea—thus the boat represented the image of this animal, and the orca's wooden representation hang also from the hunter's belt.[5] Also small sacrifices could be given to orcas: tobacco was thrown into the sea for them, because they were thought to help the sea hunter in driving walrus.[26] It was believed that the orca was a help of the hunters even if it was in the guise of wolf: this wolf was thought to force the reindeer to allow itself to be killed by the hunters.[6]

Whale

It is thought that during the hunt only those people who have been selected by the spirit of the sea could kill the whale. The hunter has to please the killed whale: it must be treated as a guest. Just like a polite host does not leave a recently arrived dear guest alone, thus similarly, the killed whale should not be left alone by the host (i.e. by the hunter who has killed it). Like a guest, it should not get hurt or feel sad. It must be entertained (e.g. by drum music, good foods). On the next whale migration (whales migrate twice a year, in spring to the north and in the autumn back), the previously killed whale is sent off back to the sea in the course of a farewell ritual. If the killed whale was pleased to (during its being a guest for a half year), then it can be hoped that it will return later, too: thus, also the future whale hunts will succeed.[27][28]

Celestial concepts

In a tale, the sky seems to be imagined arching as a vault. Celestial bodies form holes in it: beyond this vault, there is an especially light space.[29]

Central Alaskan Yup'ik

Yup'ik man of Nunivak Island, 1929

The Yup'ik people (also Central Alaskan Yup'ik, plural Yupiit), are an Eskimo people of western and southwestern Alaska ranging from southern Norton Sound southwards along the coast of the Bering Sea on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (including living on Nelson and Nunivak Islands) and along the northern coast of Bristol Bay as far east as Nushagak Bay and the northern Alaska Peninsula at Naknek River and Egegik Bay.

They are one of the four Yupik peoples of Alaska and Siberia, closely related to the Alutiiq (Pacific Yupik) of southcentral Alaska, the Siberian Yupik of St. Lawrence Island and Siberia, and the Naukan of Siberia. The Yupiit speak the Central Alaskan Yup'ik language.[30] The people of Nunivak Island, speakers of the Nunivak Island dialect of Central Alaskan Yup'ik, call themselves Cup'ig (plural Cup'it); the people of Hooper Bay and Chevak, speakers of the Hooper Bay-Chevak dialect, call themselves Cup'ik (plural Cup'it).

Medicine Man, Alaska, exorcising evil spirits from a sick boy. Photographed in Nushagak, Alaska in the 1890s.[31] Nushagak, located on Nushagak Bay of northern Bristol Bay in southwest Alaska, is part of the territory of the Yup'ik, speakers of the Central Alaskan Yup'ik language.

Yupiit are the most numerous of the various Alaska Native groups and speak the Central Alaskan Yup'ik language, a member of the Eskimo-Aleut family of languages. As of the 2000 U.S. Census, the Yupiit population in the United States numbered over 24,000,[32], of whom over 22,000 lived in Alaska, the vast majority in the seventy or so communities in the traditional Yup'ik territory of western and southwestern Alaska.[33]

Etymology of name

Yup'ik (plural Yupiit) comes from the Yup'ik word yuk meaning "person" plus the post-base -pik meaning "real" or "genuine." Thus, it means literally "real people."[34] The ethnographic literature sometimes refers to the Yup'ik people or their language as Yuk or Yuit. In the Hooper Bay-Chevak and Nunivak dialects of Yup'ik, both the language and the people are given the name Cup'ik.[30]

Origins

The common ancestors of Eskimos and Aleuts (as well as various Paleo-Siberian groups) are believed by archaeologists to have their origin in eastern Siberia and Asia, arriving in the Bering Sea area about 10,000 years ago.[35] Research on blood types suggests that the ancestors of American Indians reached North America before the ancestors of the Eskimos and Aleuts, and that there were several waves of migration from Siberia to the Americas by way of the Bering land bridge.[36] which became exposed between 20,000 and 8,000 years ago during periods of glaciation. By about 3,000 years ago the progenitors of the Yupiit had settled along the coastal areas of what would become western Alaska, with migrations up the coastal rivers—notably the Yukon and Kuskokwim—around 1400 C.E., eventually reaching as far upriver as Paimiut on the Yukon and Crow Village on the Kuskokwim.[34]

Notes

  1. "The Inuktitut Language" in Project Naming, the identification of Inuit portrayed in photographic collections at Library and Archives Canada
  2. Mihály Hoppál, Sámánok Eurázsiában (Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 2005, ISBN 9630582953) 45–50.
  3. Рубцова 1954:203–19
  4. Menovščikov 1968:442
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Духовная культура (Spiritual culture), subsection of Support for Siberian Indigenous Peoples Rights (Поддержка прав коренных народов Сибири)—see the section on Eskimos
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Edward J. Vajda Siberian Yupik (Eskimo) East Asian Studies Retrieved July 2, 2008. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "submit" defined multiple times with different content
  7. 7.0 7.1 Рубцова 1954:173
  8. Рубцова 1954:62
  9. Daniel Merkur, Becoming Half Hidden: Shamanism and Initiation among the Inuit (Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell, 1985, ISBN 91-22-00752-0), 125.
  10. MacArthur Fellows 2007 The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Retrieved July 2, 2008.
  11. Menovshchikov 1990: 70
  12. Рубцова 1954: 514
  13. Рубцова 1954: 515
  14. Рубцова 1954
  15. Рубцова 1954
  16. Burch & Forman 1988: 90
  17. Рубцова 1954:380
  18. Рубцова 1954:380,551–552
  19. Рубцова 1954:380
  20. Menovščikov 1968:440–441
  21. Рубцова 1954, tale 13, sentences (173)–(235)
  22. Меновщиков 1964: 161–162, 163 (= 165)
  23. Рубцова 1954:379
  24. Рубцова 1954:156 (see tale The orphan boy with his sister)
  25. Menovščikov 1968:439,441
  26. (Russian) A radio interview with Russian scientists about Asian Eskimos
  27. Menovščikov 1968:439–440
  28. Рубцова 1954:218
  29. Рубцова 1954:196
  30. 30.0 30.1 Alaska Native Language Center. (2001-12-07). "Central Alaskan Yup'ik." University of Alaska Fairbanks. Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  31. Ann Fienup-Riordan, Boundaries and Passages: Rule and Ritual in Yup'ik Eskimo Oral Tradition. (Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1995, p. 206.)
  32. U.S. Census Bureau. (2004-06-30). "Table 1. American Indian and Alaska Native Alone and Alone or in Combination Population by Tribe for the United States: 2000." American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes for the United States, Regions, Divisions, and States (PHC-T-18). U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000, special tabulation. Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  33. U.S. Census Bureau. (2004-06-30). "Table 16. American Indian and Alaska Native Alone and Alone or in Combination Population by Tribe for Alaska: 2000." American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes for the United States, Regions, Divisions, and States (PHC-T-18). U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000, special tabulation. Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  34. 34.0 34.1 Fienup-Riordan, 1993, p. 10.
  35. Naske and Slotnick, 1987, p. 18.
  36. Naske and Slotnick, 1987, pp. 9–10.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Fienup-Riordan, Ann. Boundaries and Passages: Rule and Ritual in Yup'ik Eskimo Oral Tradition. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1995. ISBN 978-0806126463
  • Fienup-Riordan, Ann. The Living Tradition of Yup'Ik Masks: Agayuliyararput : Our Way of Making Prayer. University of Washington Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0295975016
  • Campbell, Lyle. American Indian languages: The historical linguistics of Native America. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0195094271
  • Mithun, Marianne. The languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 0521232287
  • de Reuse, Willem J. Siberian Yupik Eskimo: The language and its contacts with Chukchi. Studies in indigenous languages of the Americas. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1994. ISBN 0874803977
  • Kleivan, Inge, and B. Sonne. Eskimos, Greenland and Canada (Iconography of Religions Section 8 - Arctic Peoples). Brill Academic Publishers, 1997. ISBN 9004071601
  • Merkur, Daniel. Becoming Half Hidden: Shamanism and Initiation among the Inuit. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell, 1985. ISBN 9122007520
  • Burch, Ernest S. (junior) and Werner Forman. The Eskimos. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1988. ISBN 0806121262
  • Hoppál, Mihály. Sámánok Eurázsiában (in Hungarian). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 2005. ISBN 9630582953. (The title means "Shamans in Eurasia", the book is written in Hungarian, but it is also published in German, Estonian and Finnish).
  • Menovščikov (Меновщиков), G. A. "Popular Conceptions, Religious Beliefs and Rites of the Asiatic Eskimos." In Popular beliefs and folklore tradition in Siberia edited by Vilmos Diószegi. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1968.
  • Menovshchikov (Меновщиков), Georgy. "Contemporary Studies of the Eskimo-Aleut Languages and Dialects: A Progress Report." In Arctic Languages: An Awakening edited by Dirmid R. F. Collis, 69–76. Vendôme: UNESCO, 1990. ISBN 9231026615
  • Рубцова, Е. С. Материалы по языку и фольклору эскимосов (чаплинский диалект) (in Russian). Москва: Российская академия наук, 1954. Transliteration of author's name, and the rendering of title in English: Rubcova, E. S. Materials on the Language and Folklore of the Eskimos, Vol. I, Chaplino Dialect. Moscow: Russian Academy of Sciences.
  • Krupnik, Igor, and Nikolay Vakhtin. 1997. "Indigenous Knowledge in Modern Culture: Siberian Yupik Ecological Legacy in Transition." Arctic Anthropology. 34, no. 1: 236.
  • Crowell, Aron, Amy F. Steffian, and Gordon L. Pullar. Looking Both Ways Heritage and Identity of the Alutiiq People. Fairbanks, Alaska: University of Alaska Press, 2001. ISBN 1889963305
  • Braund, Stephen R. & Associates. Effects of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill on Alutiiq Culture and People. Anchorage, Alaska: Stephen R. Braund & Associates, 1993.
  • Lee, Molly. 2006. "If It's Not a Tlingit Basket, Then What Is It?": Toward the Definition of an Alutiiq Twined Spruce Root Basket Type." Arctic Anthropology. 43(2): 164.
  • Luehrmann, Sonja. Alutiiq Villages Under Russian and U.S. Rule. Fairbanks, AK: University of Alaska Press, 2008. ISBN 9781602230101
  • Mishler, Craig, and Rachel Mason. "Alutiiq Vikings: Kinship and Fishing in Old Harbor, Alaska." Human Organization : Journal of the Society for Applied Anthropology. 55(3) (1996): 263.
  • Mulcahy, Joanne B. Birth & Rebirth on an Alaskan Island The Life of an Alutiiq Healer. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2001. ISBN 0820322539
  • Partnow, Patricia H. Making History Alutiiq/Sugpiaq Life on the Alaska Peninsula. Fairbanks, Alaska: University of Alaska Press, 2001. ISBN 1889963380
  • Simeonoff, Helen J., and Alphonse Pinart. Origins of the Sun and Moon Alutiiq Legend from Kodiak Island, Alaska, Collected by Alphonse Louis Pinart, March 20, 1872. Anchorage, Alaska (3212 West 30th Ave., Anchorage 99517-1660): H.J. Simeonoff, 1996.

External links



Old photos:

  • Поселок Унгазик (Чаплино) (in Russian). Музея антропологии и этнографии им. Петра Великого (Кунсткамера) Российской академии наук. Rendering in English: Ungazik settlement, Kunstkamera, Russian Academy of Sciences.
  • Ungazik settlement. Kunstkamera, Russian Academy of Sciences. Enlarged versions of the above series, select with the navigation arrows or the form.
  • Поселок Наукан (in Russian). Музея антропологии и этнографии им. Петра Великого (Кунсткамера) Российской академии наук. Rendering in English: Naukan settlement, Kunstkamera, Russian Academy of Sciences.
  • Naukan settlement. Kunstkamera, Russian Academy of Sciences. Enlarged versions of the above series, select with the navigation arrows or the form.


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