Title from verso John Kill’s Meat Market at Nome, Alaska; cattle were driven overland 1000 miles, Skagway to Nome by trail, pulling sleds and packing supplies, which were sold at Nome Meat hangs from walls, and vegetables are arranged in...
Ta'giuqtigapta Tuapaktusu'gmi Immersion Camp: Iñupiaq Land Use Values and Resources Video: 1 minute and 48 seconds, MPG-1 format. Nagruk, Kunnaan, Gary Walker, and Phil Gaudet prepare the last of the caribou meat (the first captured) for a stew....
Caption from cataloger. This photograph shows reindeer carcasses hanging on heavy frames. Four people also appear in the picture. The mission referred to is probably the Society of Friends (Quaker) Mission in Kotzebue. "Here is a picture of...
Ta'giuqtigapta Tuapaktusu'gmi Immersion Camp: Iñupiaq Land Use Values and Resources Video: 1 minute and 41 seconds, MPG-1 format. The campers enjoy a meal of black dried seal meat soaked in seal oil (Kiniqtaq). Because the weather has been pretty...
Title from finding aid. Photograph shows walrus meat and blubber spread out on a beach. Some people are standing nearby with a boat. Caption from finding aid reads "Walrus meat on beach on St. Lawrence Island". Location is St. Lawrence...
Reindeer meat drying at Gambel, Alaska, St. Lawrence Island. Visible behind the meat rack are two buildings one of which is eight sided and reminiscent of Siberian tents (yurts) and Russian forts (Redoubts).
Title supplied by cataloger. Meat cut on bandsaw. Meat would have been kept frozen in 'drop bags' and used during expedition to feed the sled dogs. Folder labeled, 'Iditarod Challenge.' Original format: 35mm color slide
Interior of meat and specialty food store, with stools at counter, plucked poultry, scales, sides of meat, Christmas tree, etc. Four men behind counter wear white coats and aprons. Sign on cash register: Get a Receipt.
Title from finding aid. Photograph shows a pile of dead caribou on the runway at Arctic Village, Alaska. Caption from finding aid reads "Caribou meat at the Arctic Village Runway 1969". Location is Arctic Village, Alaska.
Title by cataloger. Photograph of an elevated cache with at least four dogsleds stored for summer. Hung higher and to the right side of the photo is drying meat. Also visible are at least two canoes. Narrative in photo album reads: "An...
Title taken from the back of photograph. "Hauling a chunk of meat out of the cellar." Property of Dorothea Leighton, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore MD.
Title taken from the back of the photograph. Dried meat and blubber are stored in " meat cellars " in the ground. This woman is climbing down to get some meat for her dogs. " Property of Dorothea Leighton, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore MD.
Title taken from caption. View of a dog beneath racks of drying beluga whale meat. Photograph taken after a successful whaling hunt (see photographs UAA-hmc-0620-series1-f2-92, 93, 95). Photograph taken July 5, 1952. Photograph type: 35 mm color...
Title taken from caption. View of moose meat drying on rack at Levelock, Alaska, with building in background. Also from caption: "Levelock, AK." From verso: "Moose drying." Photograph type: 35 mm color slide. Photographer: Robert Fortuine.
Title taken from verso. View of Beluga whale meat cut in strips drying on racks in summer, Kotzebue, Alaska, with tent in right background. 1960's? Photographer: Frank Whaley. Original photograph size: 8" x 10".
Title taken from information with photo. People hanging caribou meat to dry on rack after winter caribou hunt at Anaktuvuk Pass, Alaska, with sled loaded with hides in foreground and barrels in background. 1963. Photographer: Ward W. Wells....
Title taken from information with photograph. View of caribou meat drying on rack at Anaktuvuk Pass, Alaska, with dogs, tents, and buildings in background. May 1970. Photographer: Ward W. Wells. Original photograph size: 2 1/4" x 2 1/4".
Title taken from verso. Men using snowmachine and sled to transport whale meat in Gambell, St. Lawrence Island, Alaska. April 1969. Photographer: Ward W. Wells. Original photograph size: 8" x 10".