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Abstract

SMITHSONIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO ALASKAN ETHNOGRAPHY: THE FIRST IPY EXPEDITION TO BARROW, 1881-1883

Ernest S. Burch, Jr.
National Museum of Natural History, Arctic Studies Center
Bio

From 1881 to 1883, as part of the First International Polar Year, an expedition sponsored by the U.S. Signal Corps and the Smithsonian Institution operated a research station a short distance north of where the modern city of Barrow now stands. The ten members of the expedition had the primary task of making an unbroken series of weather and magnetic observations over the two-year period, and the secondary task of studying the natural history of the Barrow area. Natural history included descriptions of Native life and collections of material culture, in addition to studies of the fauna and flora. This paper summarizes the substantial contributions to our knowledge of North Alaskan Eskimo life made by members of the expedition and evaluates them in the light of work that has been done since.


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