Vascular Vegetation of Buldir Island, Aleutian Islands, Alaska, Compared to Another Aleutian Island

ARCTIC ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Vernon Byrd
1952 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 145-154
Author(s):  
Ross R. Heinrich ◽  
Harry K. Haill

Abstract The initial motions of the P and S phases have been tabulated from the original seismograms of sixty earthquakes which recorded at the Florissant station in the years 1927–1938. The epicenters of these earthquakes were within limited areas of the following regions: the Aleutian Islands, the west-central coast of South America, and Central America. The study indicates that the Florissant seismograms show a preferential direction of motion for both P and S waves in the recordings of certain earthquakes from selected regions. The data compiled on the S phase indicated that a majority of the Aleutian and South American earthquakes recorded a sharp impulsive initial northeast motion at Florissant. The Central American earthquakes studied recorded S phases of somewhat indefinite onset which did not exhibit a preferential motion as they were read. The results of the application of Neumann's method of S-wave analysis to the Saint Louis seismograms of two selected Aleutian Island earthquakes are presented and a brief discussion of some possible structural implications of the various data is given.


2003 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 9-31
Author(s):  
MaryGen Salmon

Watching a gathering of Athabaskan, Yup'ik, Inupiaq, Tlingit/Haida, Siberian Yup'ik, and Sugpiaq dancers, musicians, and artists, the author wonders if “authentic” Native dance still exists in Alaska. This question is asked with the knowledge that these performances were reconstructed after the Aleutian Island peoples were severely stressed by internment during World War II.


ARCTIC ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jerry W. Hupp ◽  
Joel A. Schmutz ◽  
Craig R. Ely

Most emperor geese (Chen canagica) nest in a narrow coastal region of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (YKD) in western Alaska, but their winter distribution extends more than 3000 km from Kodiak Island, Alaska, to the Commander Islands, Russia. We marked 53 adult female emperor geese with satellite transmitters on the YKD in 1999, 2002, and 2003 to examine whether chronology of migration or use of seasonal habitats differed among birds that wintered in different regions. Females that migrated relatively short distances (650–1010 km) between the YKD and winter sites on the south side of the Alaska Peninsula bypassed autumn staging areas on the Bering Sea coast of the Alaska Peninsula or used them for shorter periods (mean = 57 days) than birds that made longer migrations (1600–2640 km) to the western Aleutian Islands (mean = 97 days). Alaska Peninsula migrants spent more days at winter sites (mean = 172 days, 95% CI: 129–214 days) than western Aleutian Island migrants (mean = 91 days, 95% CI: 83–99 days). Birds that migrated 930–1610 km to the eastern Aleutian Islands spent intermediate intervals at fall staging (mean = 77 days) and wintering areas (mean = 108 days, 95% CI: 95–119 days). Return dates to the YKD did not differ among birds that wintered in different regions. Coastal staging areas on the Alaska Peninsula may be especially important in autumn to prepare Aleutian migrants physiologically for long-distance migration to winter sites, and in spring to enable emperor geese that migrate different distances to reach comparable levels of condition before nesting.


1963 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-77
Author(s):  
William Stauder ◽  
Agustin Udias

Abstract The polarization of the S wave at stations distributed azimuthally about the source is examined for each of twenty-five Aleutian Island earthquakes. A combination of data from the first motion of P and from the polarization of S is then used to study the focal mechanisms of the earthquakes. This combination of P and S wave data is found to make possible a good determination of the focal mechanism in cases where data from the first motion of P alone do not suffice. The earthquakes are divided into three groups according to three basic patterns of S wave polarization. The first group (fourteen earthquakes) corresponds to a double couple. The second group (five earthquakes) and the third group (six earthquakes) are conformable to conjugate shears and may therefore be explained by single couple sources of opposite moment, respectively. It is shown that a uniform principal stress system predominates in the region and that the axis of greatest compressive stress is normal to the trend of the island arc.


1984 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 319-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carol Seefeldt

In order to test the hypothesis that children's negative attitudes toward the elderly are unique to the culture of the United States, attitudes of children toward the elderly in four diverse cultures were compared. The Semantic Differential subtest of the CATE (Children's Attitudes Toward the Elderly, 1976) was administered to samples of fourth, fifth, and sixth grade children drawn from the Native Alaskan population of the Aleutian Island ( n = 29); mainland United States ( n = 60); Australia ( n = 39); and Ascunion, Paraguay ( n = 69). T statistics were used to compare scores on the total SD for the concept OLD and YOUNG PEOPLE within each culture. Analysis of variance was used to determine differences in attitudes toward the elderly between cultures on the total score of the SD for the concepts OLD and YOUNG PEOPLE, and for analysis of individual items of the SD. The results indicate that children in the Aleutian Islands, Paraguay, and Australia rated young people more positively than they did old people, while children in mainland United States rated old and young people similarly. There were no differences between the cultures in the children's rating of the concept OLD PEOPLE, as measured by the total score of the SD, but children in the Aleutian Islands rated old people more negatively than those in the other cultures on several items of the SD. Children in Australia rated the concept YOUNG PEOPLE more positively than did children in other cultures. The conclusion is reached that negative attitudes toward the elderly are not unique to the United States, but may be more universal to the human experience.


Zootaxa ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4524 (1) ◽  
pp. 112
Author(s):  
ELIZABETH A. HORVATH ◽  
ROBERT P. STONE

An unusual new species of plexaurid octocoral, Alaskagorgia splendicitrina, is described from a specimen collected in the far west Aleutian Island Archipelago, Alaska, USA. Unusual features that separate it from its only congener include: the vibrant yellow color of the live colony and an arborescent growth form with numerous coiling and twisting branches, the pale yellow color of the sclerites and the lack of small and densely warted double-headed sclerites. The new species is represented by only a single specimen despite extensive sampling in the region during the past several decades; the speculation is that it radiated from the much less explored region to the west. 


Zootaxa ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 2571 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROGER N. CLARK ◽  
STEPHEN C. JEWETT

A new genus and thirteen new species of echinasterid sea stars are described from nearshore waters of the Aleutian Islands. The new genus Aleutihenricia is distinguished from Henricia by the morphology and arrangement of the skeletal ossicles. Henricia beringiana D'yakonov, 1950 is designated as the type species. The new species described include Aleutihenricia federi, Henricia lineata, H. uluudax, H. iodinea, H. rhytisma, H. gemma, H. echinata, H. vermilion, H. elachys, H. insignis, Odontohenricia aurantia, O. ahearnae, and O. violacea. In addition to the descriptions, associations between echinasterids and sponges are briefly discussed. A key to the shallow water (<20 m) Echinasteridae of the Aleutian Islands is provided.


Author(s):  
Olesya Smyshlyaeva ◽  
Elena Severova ◽  
Olga Krylovich ◽  
Evgeniya Kuzmicheva ◽  
Arkady Savinetsky ◽  
...  

We have studied the long- and short-term periods of seabird influence on coastal vegetation. In the Aleutian Islands during the Holocene, terrestrial predators were virtually absent; as a result, large seabird colonies thrived along the coasts or across entire islands. Bird guano enriches the soil with nitrogen, which can lead to the formation of highly modified ornithogenic (bird-formed) ecosystems. The vegetation of several Aleutian Islands has been reconstructed; however, only the vegetation on Carlisle Island had noticeable impact from the seabird guano. For more detailed investigation of bird influence, we conducted pollen analysis to reconstruct the 9,300-year-old vegetation dynamics of the coast of Shemya Island. From earlier studies of nitrogen isotopes in peat, we discovered that a large seabird colony existed on Shemya from 4600 to 2400 years ago, and birds also influenced coastal ecosystems between 1470–1160 and 810–360 years ago. In these sequences, the tundra dominated by Ericaceae dwarf shrubs initially spread on the coast. During a period of at least 2200-years nitrogen enrichment led to the development of herb meadows with a high presence of Apiaceae. After a noticeable reduction in seabird colonies due to human hunting, grass-meadows spread. During the late Holocene several hundred years of seabird impact led to an increase in abundance of indicator taxa, ferns and umbelliferous species, as well as in total pollen concentration, but this did not result in a radical change of dominants. In recent decades, due to the extinction of the bird colonies, heather communities have begun to spread on the Shemya coast. Also large ash emissions in the Aleutian Islands can lead to a decrease in pollen concentration even in peat located far from an eruption.


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