Holdings Information
Imam cimiucia = Our changing sea / Anne Salomon, Henry Huntington, Nick Tanape ; principal photographer, Lisa Williams ; with contributions from Peter Anahonak [and others] ; Sugt'stun language translations by Sally Ash [and others].
Bibliographic Record Display
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Title:Imam cimiucia = Our changing sea / Anne Salomon, Henry Huntington, Nick Tanape ; principal photographer, Lisa Williams ; with contributions from Peter Anahonak [and others] ; Sugt'stun language translations by Sally Ash [and others].
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Variant Title:Our changing sea
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Author/Creator:Salomon, Anne K.
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Other Contributors/Collections:Tanape, Nick.
Anahonak, Peter.
Huntington, Henry P.
Xwi7xwa Collection
Alaska Sea Grant College Program.
National Sea Grant Office (U.S.)
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Published/Created:Fairbanks, Alaska : Alaska Sea Grant College Program, ©2011.
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Holdings
Holdings Record Display
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Location:XWI7XWA LIBRARY stacksWhere is this?
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Call Number: FSU S25 U7 2011
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Number of Items:1
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Status:Available
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Location:XWI7XWA LIBRARY stacksWhere is this?
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FNHL (Xwi7xwa) Subjects: Yup'ik--Oral tradition.
Yup'ik--Natural resource management
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Library of Congress Subjects:Marine resources--Alaska--Kenai Peninsula.
Pacific Gulf Yupik Eskimos--Ethnobiology--Alaska--Kenai Peninsula.
Pacific Gulf Yupik Eskimos--Alaska--Kenai Peninsula--History.
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Description:xvii, 105 p. : ill. (chiefly col.), col. maps, ports. ; 21 x 31 cm.
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Notes:This book is supported by the U.S. Department of Commerce, NOAA National Sea Grant Office.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 99-102) and index.
Text is primarily in English, with some quotes in Yupik/Sugt'stun.
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ISBN:9781566121590
1566121590
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Contents:Our ocean home
Living from the sea
The tides that fed us
The most recent decline
A story of multiple causes
Our past
In deep time
The Russian era: from seasonal camps to established villages
Extinctions and extirpations
In living memory
Following the fish, then the jobs
Sea otters return
Local shellfish begin to decline
The earthquake of '64
Electricity comes to the village
The Gulf of Alaska commercial crustacean crash
Clams and cockles: the next to go
When the water died
Nearshore marine invertebrates decline one after the next
Identifying the problems to create solutions
Serial depletion and ecosystem overfishing
Putting it all together: why have bidarkis recently declined?
Our people and sea otters: predators and competitors
Ecosystem effects of sea otters
Overexploitation
Changing life ways
Shifting baselines
Contaminants and pollution
Changing ocean temperatures
Climate change, sea ice, and ocean acidification
Other ecological changes
Enjoying our marine resources in the future
Traditional management of marine resources
Teaching the next generation
Quillumi kipucesnaiyarrtaa: how can we bring it back?
The future of our ocean home.