Examination of Prehistoric Copper Technology and Copper Sources in Western Arctic and Subarctic North America

Author(s):  
U.M. FRANKLIN ◽  
E. BADONE ◽  
R. GOTTHARDT ◽  
B. YORGA
Keyword(s):  
Polar Record ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 24 (150) ◽  
pp. 231-234
Author(s):  
John Bockstoce

This article summarizes voyages in the western Arctic of North America during four summers 1983–87, in an 18.3 m cutter-rigged steel motor cruiser, for the purpose of research into the history of commercial whaling, sealing and fur trading. Use of a small, self-sufficient sea-going boat allows access into the small harbours and coves where relics of commerce from the sailing-ship and early steam-ship eras are mostly found.


1983 ◽  
Vol 115 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Larson ◽  
Robert E. Roughley

AbstractThe species Dytiscus vittiger Gyllenhal, 1827 is transferred from the genus Agabus Leach sensu lat. to Ilybius Erichson. The species is recorded from the western arctic regions of North America for the first time. A full description of the species and comparisons with other North American members of the genus are provided.


1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (12) ◽  
pp. 2017-2027 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. M. French ◽  
J. S. Gozdzik

Pseudomorphs of cryogenic fissures in stratified medium to fine silty sand and sand at Belchatów, Poland, indicate both epigenetic and syngenetic freezing of sediments at various times during the Pleistocene. Syngenetic fissures are more frequent. They are typically 0.5–2.0 m in vertical dimension, range in width from 5 to 20 cm, exhibit both upwarps and downwarps of enclosing sediments, and are offset from each other in the stratigraphic sequence. Epigenetic fissures are larger, generally increase in width upwards, and are related to an inferred ground surface. It is difficult to distinguish between syngenetic fissures that penetrate permafrost and soil (ground) veins or wedges that require only deep seasonal frost for their formation. Cold, continental environments characterized by rapid sedimentation and permafrost aggradation appear most conducive for formation of syngenetic fissures. Today, both large and small syngenetic fissures are known to exist in the permafrost regions of Siberia but are rarely reported from the western Arctic lowlands of North America.


Rangifer ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 253
Author(s):  
D.R. Klein ◽  
J.A. Kruse

Our hope is that this analysis will highlight the best elements of each management system, which collectively will serve as a model to improve the management of large caribou herds in North America.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Kemp ◽  
Andrew Parsons ◽  
Karin Sigloch ◽  
Mitchell Mihalynuk ◽  
Simon Stephenson

<p>Alaska is made up of a mosaic of terranes that have enigmatic origins. Several plate restorations for the assembly of Alaska have been proposed, but their validity remains debated, partly due to the removal of vast volumes of oceanic plate material via subduction at the accretionary margins. The position, depth and volume of this subducted lithosphere, recognised as seismically fast anomalies in tomographic images, can be used to track the locations of subduction plate boundaries of the past, thus serving as an important constraint for plate restorations of convergent margins. Existing plate tectonic reconstructions can be assessed and developed further by integrating seismic tomographic models of the mantle with geological and palaeomagnetic bedrock datasets, a procedure which we term “tomotectonic analysis”.</p><p>Previous tomotectonic studies (e.g., Sigloch & Mihalynuk, 2017, GSA Bulletin) have highlighted various discrepancies between the most generally accepted tectonic reconstruction models of the western coast of North America and tomographic observations of slabs in the mantle. For example, the kinematic reconstruction of Laurentia, constrained by the opening of the Atlantic Ocean, places the Cordilleran margin thousands of kilometres east of the tomographically imaged Angayucham and Mezcalera slabs in the mantle during the Early to Late Jurassic. This suggests that there was extensive westward subduction beneath the Insular and Intermontane superterranes that involved multiple plates, rather than a single subduction zone. Though a recent plate reconstruction that employed tomotectonic methods (Clennett et al., 2020, G-Cubed) provided a coherent explanation of bedrock, plate kinematic and mantle observations for the Cordilleran margin, application of this model to Alaska and the Arctic was hindered by low tomographic resolution beneath that region and requires further investigation. In particular, restoration of the Arctic Alaska terrane is complicated further by its possible relationship with the proposed Arctic Alaska-Chukotka microcontinent and its involvement in the accretionary development of the Siberian peninsula and the opening of the Canada Basin, for which several working hypotheses continue to be debated.</p><p>In this study we consider the application of tomotectonic analysis to Mesozoic reconstructions of the western Arctic and central Alaska. We will compare and contrast these tectonic reconstructions with respect to the distribution of slabs in the deep mantle based on observations from the latest seismic tomographic models, such as DETOX-P1, P2 and P3 (Hosseini et al., 2020, GJI). We will also highlight the limitations of current tomographic models and the need for targeted seismic investigations with greater resolution of the underlying mantle. This discussion provides the motivation and rationale for a new seismic tomographic model of the mantle beneath North America currently being produced by the authors using a more complete USArray dataset.</p>


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