Beschreibung
Volume II of the Miscellaneous Publications of the University of Alaska. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR on the title page as follows: "To my very good friend A. Nordale [Arnold M. Nordale] | with appreciation of many kind | deed bestowed upon me during | my visit to Dawson, as well as his | keen interest in Palaeontology and | Archaeology. ????, with sincere thanks. | Otto Wm. Geist | University of Alaska | September 28, 1948." Rubber stamp on rear pastedown as follows: Arnold M. Nordale, Dawson, Yukon. 8vo. (24 cm.) [18] 1-391p. Foreword by Charles E. Bunnell, President, University of Alaska. Frontispiece black and white photo of Owhwowin of Sevuokuk plus 78 black and white captioned Text Figures, 78 black and white captioned Plates [photographs], and 8 black and white maps. Seven appendices as follows: I. The Punuk Island Group, Bering Sea, Alaska by Otto William Geist; II. Notes on Geography and Geology of Western St. Lawrence Island, Alaska by RodLand Snodgrass; III. Notes on the Mammals of St. Lawrence Island, Alaska by Olaus F. Murie; IV. Dog Skulls from St. Lawrence Island, Alaska by Olaus F. Murie; V. The Birds of St. Lawrence Island, Alaska by Olaus F. Murie; VI. Report on the Mollusks of St. Lawrence Island, Alaska by H.J. Boekelman; VII. Analyses of Mineralogical and Geological Specimens by Paul Hopkins and Maurice L. Sharp. Black and white drawings throughout by Nupok. Blue buckram binding with gilt letters on the spine. Jut touches of wear to extremities, cloth clean and bright, gilt ever so slightly dulled, all figures and plates in fine condition, else near fine to fine with no internal markings. No dust jacket. Otto William Geist (1888 ? 1963), a.k.a. Aghvook, was an archaeologist, explorer and naturalist who worked in the circumpolar north and for the University of Alaska for much of his adult life. He was befriended by Olaus and Margaret Murie, who helped mentor him on scientific techniques for collecting and preserving archaeological and biological specimens, including field taxidermy. n 1957, Geist received an honorary doctorate from the University of Alaska Fairbanks. He was a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Anthropological Association, and the Arctic Institute of North America. The building housing the university's museum was named after him. Mount Geist (10,716 ft), in the Alaska Range was also named for him. Froelich Gladstone Rainey (1907 ? 1992) was an American anthropologist and Director of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Anthropology and Archaeology from 1947 to 1977. In 1975, in recognition of his role at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, where he had served as the university's first professor of anthropology from 1935 to 1942, Rainey's Cabin on the campus was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Arnold M. Nordale (1896-1976) to whom the book is inscribed was a mining engineer in Alaska who invented drills to be used in mining. He was also involved in gold mining in the Yukon. Just an amazing collection of information and illustrations about the Kukulik excavations by two important and well-known scholars.
Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 009599
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