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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNArchaeologists Unearth Rare 1,000-Year-Old Food Storage Pit in AlaskaInitial findings suggest the cache was used to preserve moose and caribou meat in the harsh climate of southeastern Alaska ...
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Archaeologists Find a 1000-Yr-Old Pit Used by Indigenous Tribe to Store Meat and Berries During Harsh SeasonsArchaeologists Find a 1000-Yr-Old Pit Used by Indigenous Tribe to Store Meat and Berries During Harsh Seasons Archaeologists ...
The Dene people, or Athabascans, including the Dena'ina and Ahtna tribes, traditionally used these areas for summer fishing ...
Air Force engineers and archaeologists in Alaska have discovered a food cache on the Upper Cook Inlet southwest of Anchorage used 1,000 years ago to store salmon, moose, caribou, and berries.
The Western Arctic Caribou Herd, once the biggest in Alaska, is faltering, having fallen from a high of 490,000 animals in 2003 to only 152,000 as of 2023. But to the east, the Porcupine Caribou ...
according to a Dec. 6 news release from the Alaska military complex where the discovery was made. Cache pits are like root cellars. They were used to preserve fish, meat and berries, archaeologist ...
A 1,000-year-old cache pit believed to have been used to store moose or caribou meat has been discovered in Alaska, providing ...
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