Frozen in Time: a remarkably well-preserved prehistoric site in Alaska

Frozen in Time: a remarkably well-preserved prehistoric site in Alaska
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This is a past event

Part of the King's Museum Tuesday Evening Lectures

Nunalleq: The Yupiit and the Arctic World is an exhibition of recent archaeological discoveries from western Alaska, excavated by a team from the University of Aberdeen in partnership with the Yup’ik Eskimo village of Quinhagak.  

‘Nunalleq’, meaning ‘the old village’ in Yup’ik, is a winter village site dating from 1350-1650AD.  The permafrost has preserved tens of thousands of rarely seen artefacts from wood and other organic materials, and the collections ranks as one the largest and best-preserved ever recovered from the north.  The research is a race against time as rising sea levels and melting permafrost are eroding the site at a catastrophic rate.

The exhibition explores the relationship between Eskimo/Inuit peoples and the Arctic environment through the lens of material culture, with finds from the recent archaeological excavation displayed alongside objects from the University of Aberdeen Museums’ Arctic collections.  The finds from Alaska appear with the permission of the owners, Qanirtuuq, Inc., of Quinhagak, Alaska.

All are welcome to this series of public lectures organised by King's Museum. This event is free.

Speaker
Dr Richard Knecht, University of Aberdeen
Venue
New King's, room 10
Contact

King’s Museum
University of Aberdeen
17 High Street
Old Aberdeen AB
4 3EE
T: 01224 274330
E: kingsmuseum@abdn.ac.uk
W: www.abdn.ac.uk/kingsmuseum