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Nenana / n ɛ ˈ n æ n ə / (Lower Tanana: Toghotili; [4] is a home rule city in the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area of the Unorganized Borough in Interior Alaska. Nenana developed as a Lower Tanana community at the confluence where the tributary Nenana River enters the Tanana. The population was 378 at the 2010 census, down from 402 in 2000.
The Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) 55-2,3,4 codes, which are used by the United States Census Bureau to uniquely identify states and counties, is provided with each entry. [4] Alaska's code is 02, so each code is of the format 02XXX. The FIPS code for each county equivalent links to census data for that county equivalent.
The Nenana Student Living Center (NSLC) is a boarding home for high school students (grades 9–12) operated by the NCSD. As of 2018, it houses about 77 students who originate from various parts of Alaska. [3] It is one of three in the state of Alaska. The students attend the regular Nenana City School and are not segregated in a separate ...
Nenana Municipal Airport, a city-owned public-use airport located one mile south of the central business district of Nenana; Nenana River, a tributary of the Tanana River; Nenana Valley, an archaeological site in the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area of Alaska; Nenana, Alaska, a Home Rule City in the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area of the Unorganized Borough ...
PANN (ENN) – Nenana Municipal Airport – Nenana, Alaska; PANO (NNL) – Nondalton Airport ... UNECE. 28 February 2012. – includes IATA codes; FAA Order JO 7350 ...
The entire state was defined as one vast unorganized borough by the Borough Act of 1961, and over the ensuing years, Alaska's organized boroughs were carved out of it. Alaska's first organized borough, and the only one incorporated immediately after passage of the 1961 legislation, was the Bristol Bay Borough. The pressure from residents of ...
Nenana Municipal Airport (IATA: ENN, ICAO: PANN, FAA LID: ENN) is a city-owned public-use airport located one mile (1.6 km) south of the central business district of Nenana, a city in the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area of the U.S. state of Alaska.
The oldest stratified sites in the Nenana Valley region date to from 11,820 to 11,010 BP. [4] The Mesa complex in northern Alaska dates to 11,660 BP." [5] [6] More recently, Tanana Valley sites have been dated to pre-Clovis period, or 13,000–14,000 cal yr BP. [7]