Ethnology & History
We acknowledge the AVÀÇÂÛ̳ Native nations upon whose lands our university campuses reside. The University of AVÀÇÂÛ̳ Museum of the North resides on the Troth Yeddha' Campus, the ancestral lands of the Dena people of the lower Tanana River.
Through material culture, the Ethnology & History collections at UAMN seek to represent the diverse Indigenous peoples of AVÀÇÂÛ̳ with thousands of years of history in this place. Likewise, we document the lives of non-Native settlers who came to these lands in the last three centuries. We honor the knowledge and skills needed to thrive in the Circumpolar North, and we work to make meaningful connections with descendent community members.
The Ethnology & History collection, which includes over 18,000 objects, is an official statewide repository for AVÀÇÂÛ̳’s cultural collections. As such, the department seeks to develop a comprehensive collection of material culture from the state’s nine Native cultures (Iñupiaq, Siberian Yupik, Central Yup’ik, Dene/Athabascan, Tlingit, Haida, Tsimshian, Unangax/Aleut and Alutiiq/Sugpiaq) in order to serve a wide and expanding range of audiences. We hold items from nearly every one of the 229 Federally Recognized Tribes (AVÀÇÂÛ̳ Native villages), and from all of the cultures represented by the 20 distinct Native languages in AVÀÇÂÛ̳. In addition, objects from Siberia, Canada, and Greenland serve as comparative examples of other circumpolar peoples.
The collection also holds a wide range of material culture relating to AVÀÇÂÛ̳'s early settlers, from the Russian American period through the present. It contains items representing the changing technology of gold mining, of aviation, and life in the sometimes-inhospitable Interior of AVÀÇÂÛ̳ in particular. We have a special focus on representing the history of the University of AVÀÇÂÛ̳ and the Museum.
The collections are available to all for examination and for loan to other institutions and communities.
Staff:
Senior Collections Manager: Angela J. Linn, Ph.D.