College of Arts and Sciences
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/4127
2024-03-21T20:41:08ZDatasets for journal article: Physical and chemical characterization of a remote coastal aquifer in the subpolar domain provides insight into submarine groundwater discharge at high latitudes
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/14902
Datasets for journal article: Physical and chemical characterization of a remote coastal aquifer in the subpolar domain provides insight into submarine groundwater discharge at high latitudes
Russo, Aeon; Jenckes, Jordan; Munk, Jens; Kirshen, Alexander; Boutt, David; Munk, LeeAnn
2024-02-29T00:00:00ZDatasets for journal article: Contribution of fresh submarine groundwater discharge to the Gulf of Alaska
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/13150
Datasets for journal article: Contribution of fresh submarine groundwater discharge to the Gulf of Alaska
Russo, Aeon
*Source code with initial conditions for LPRM model (R file)
*Input and output files for LPRM and GLDAS models (.csv files)
*ESRI map package (.aprx file) that allows subsequent users to recreate Figures 3 and 5 using ArcGIS Pro
2023-03-08T00:00:00ZUntapped Talent: Immigrant Integration and Inclusion in Anchorage, Alaska
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/12879
Untapped Talent: Immigrant Integration and Inclusion in Anchorage, Alaska
Gat, Nyabony; Kuhn, Shannon; Buckingham, Sara L.; Mbise, Amana; Chen, Tzu-Chiao; Sytniak, Sofia
Untapped Talent is a study of immigrants’ integration and inclusion in Anchorage with respect to education, employment, health care, access to public spaces, interactions with government agencies, social networks, and developing a sense of home. In this report, the term ‘immigrant’ is used for all people who moved from another country to the United States after their birth to live here indefinitely, including refugees, asylees, and asylum-seekers. The research team applied both quantitative and qualitative methods to uncover the results. In this document, we share findings and summarize what may help immigrants feel more at home in Anchorage.
2022-05-01T00:00:00ZBenny Benson's Hidden Unangax̂ Heritage
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/12729
Benny Benson's Hidden Unangax̂ Heritage
Livingston, Michael; Murray, Martha G.; Evans, Stenner; Soloview, Fyodor G.; Smith, Carol Larsen
Friday, July 9, 2027, will be the 100-year anniversary of the raising of the Alaska flag designed by seventh
grade student Benny Benson. Top 8% of US state flag designs. Only US state flag designed by a Native
American. Youngest designer. Indentured #217. Orphan. Poorest. “Inmate.” Only US state flag designer
alive when the flags were flown to the Moon. As we prepare for the 100-year anniversary, what do know
about Benny - as opposed to assume?
We assumed that Benny was age 13 when he won the Alaska flag contest in 1927; history books said so. We
assumed that his date of birth was October 12, 1913, and that his mother’s maiden name was Tatiana
Schebolein. His official State of Alaska birth certificate said so. Yet, while researching Benny’s family tree,
we uncovered documents which indicated otherwise. We contacted a relative who said Benny’s birth
certificate is incorrect. We contacted the State of Alaska’s Health Analytics and Vital Records Section
(HAVRS) who contacted the Alaska State Museums. A panel of Alaska history experts reviewed our
documents and agreed that Benny’s birthdate should be corrected. HAVRS said we needed a court order.
We petitioned the Alaska Superior Court, and on February 28, 2022, Alaska Superior Court Judge Adolf
Zeman issued a court order (containing Unangam Tunuu – Aleut language) to correct Benny Benson’s birth
records. Benny was actually born on September 12, 1912 – over 13 months earlier than previously reported.
Benny’s mother’s maiden name was not Tatiana Schebolein; it was Tatiana Ioannovna Dediukhina.
We also assumed that Benny was Alutiiq. Many sources said so, and good sources too: Museums, libraries,
Alaska Native organizations, and Alaska historical societies. In 1950, when Benny was age 38, he moved to
Kodiak. Sadly, in 1972, at age 59, Benny passed away and is buried in Kodiak. Kodiak is Alutiiq territory,
and this may explain why Benny is often identified as Alutiiq. Yet Alaska Native ancestry is not defined
solely upon where we move to later in life or the geographical location where we are born or are buried.
Alaska Native ancestry is defined by where our ancestors are born and lived. When one of our genealogy
colleagues casually mentioned finding records that indicated Benny’s mother Tatiana was born in Unangax̂
territory, this launched a lengthy-, in-depth genealogical investigation of his family tree. With help from
many others, we found birth and marriage records which demonstrate that Benny’s mother Tatiana and his
grandparents were born in Unalaska – the heart of Unangax̂ territory. Thus, Benny was a member of the
Qawalangin Tribe of Unalaska – the Qawax̂ or Sea Lion Tribe. His great grandparents were from Amlia
Village; Benny was a descendant of the Native Village of Atka. Despite others claiming without evidence
that Benny Benson was Alutiiq, the documents found during this research show that Benny was Unangax̂.
This research is significant on several fronts. First, it spotlights Benny Benson who – despite all odds – won
a contest by reaching for the stars. Over 95 years after he won the Alaska flag contest, Benny is still in the
news in a heartwarming story during the depth of a gloomy global pandemic and conflict in Ukraine. Like
most family tree stories, there are sad (even heart-wrenching) times, but overall, Benny’s story is uplifting.
This paper illuminates the plight of Alaska orphans who sometimes do not know their date of birth, the
names of their ancestors, or their cultural heritage. Orphans need good families and thorough family tree
research. This paper also underscores the importance of questioning written history and the need for history
detectives keen on forensically investigating Alaska family trees with patient persistence while seeking the
truth – whatever the truth may be. The birth record correction is significant because it changes Alaska
history and represents a larger effort towards truth, reconciliation, equity, and racial justice for North
American indigenous peoples who were often given the short shrift in the 20th Century. The birth record
correction is a victory for archivists, Russian Orthodox family record keepers, and genealogists who love a
complex mystery that twists and turns over time. This paper spotlights the need for careful research before
centenary celebrations. Finally, this paper spotlights the linguistic and artistic talents of the Unangax̂ people
from whom so much has been taken during the past 300 years and who have given so much including the
name Alaska itself and now we know the strong design of the unique Alaska flag.
This paper is dedicated to Alaska seventh grade students who know there is no chance of winning a contest.
And enter anyway.
2022-03-10T00:00:00Z