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Alaska Native Science and Engineering Program. The following list of Alaska Native inventors and scientists begins to document Alaska Natives with deep historical and ecological knowledge about system-wide health, knowledge that in many cases precedes and exceeds discoveries published in the scientific literature. [1] [2] [3]
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Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures; Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences; Encyclopedia of Analytical Chemistry; Encyclopedia of Conifers; Encyclopedia of Cybernetics; Encyclopedia of Earth; Encyclopedia of Evolution; Encyclopedia of Flora and Fauna of Bangladesh; Encyclopedia of Life
In a 1992 review of Wharton's later book, They Don't Speak Russian in Sitka, Jo McMeen of the Huntingdon Daily News described it as much less "stimulating" telling of Alaskan history than The Alaska Gold Rush. [7] The Alaska Gold Rush was reviewed by Jim B. Pearson in History: Reviews of New Books. [8]
During World War II in 1942 Aleuts were evacuated from northern Alaska and housed in a tented encampment on the site. [1] The school closed in 1975. That year, the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975 was passed, enabling tribes to contract with the BIA to provide and manage education for their children. They took over ...
He has written about the history of Alaska. He was born in the Upper Midwest and went to high school in a suburb of New York. He was a musician in the Navy and served in the Pacific. [2] He has a Ph.D. from the University of Oregon. [3] His book Battleground Alaska explores conflict between state's rights and federalism in environmental policy. [4]
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Education and Democracy; Education for Extinction; The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860–1935; The Elusive Ideal; An Elusive Science; The Emergence of the American University; The End of American Childhood