35 second, color/silent, film clip showing people catching salmon in a net and processing them, 1958-1961.
A small boat is in the background. The women are using ulus to cut the fish.
61 second film clip, color with audio track narration Clip shows the early Bristol Bay salmon fishery. Narration discusses the use of the sailboats during the time that power boats were banned from Bristol Bay, a ban that lasted until the...
61 second film clip, color with audio track narration Clip showing the the operation of salmon fish traps. Narration describes techniques and impacts of fish trapping.
The Alaska History Nugget series was created in 2004-2005 as a...
70 second film clip, color/silent, of fishing near Deering, Alaska. A man and a boy in a small rowboat set the net and haul it in. People on shore help pull it in and pick the fish out.
73 second, color/silent film clip of commercial fishing. Scenes include halibut being loaded onto a processor, a crab pot being emptied of crab, nets of shrimp, and clamming.
84 cm long x 17.7 cm wide; made of braided sinew and braided root; side stakes of birch or willow twigs; five floats of a very light wood attached to top of net; sinkers of pieces of antler and stone; twig used for stake; two rock sinkers have...
Colonists from Alaska Rural Rehabilitation Corporation's Matanuska Valley Colony netting salmon in Cook Inlet, Alaska. From verso: "Colonists netting salmon in Cook Inlet, 1936." Photographer: Almer J. Peterson.
Driftnet boat in storage out of water, fishing nets on rack. Not allowed to fish because of mousse and oil debris found In their fishing waters caused by the Exxon Valdez - Kenai Boat Harbor (Cook Inlet).
Driftnet fisherman mends last years tear in fishing net. Not allowed to fish because of mousse and oil debris found in their fishing waters caused by the Exxon Valdez - Kenai Boat Harbor (Cook Inlet).