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Traveling Across Alaska

Simon Paneak
Memorial Museum

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Location of Simon Paneak Memorial Museum

Simon Paneak Memorial Museum
341 Mekiana Road
Anaktuvuk Pass, Alaska, 99721
Voice: 907-661-3413
Fax: 907-661-3414
Website: www.north-slope.org/nsb/55.htm
E-mail: grant.spearman@north-slope.org

The Museum and the community are only accessible by air. Daily direct flights from Fairbanks are available from several air carriers serving the community.

The Simon Paneak Memorial Museum is a combination Local History and Ethnographic Museum, located in the village of Anaktuvuk Pass, Alaska. It is housed in a handsome log structure situated on high ground near the northwest corner of the village, overlooking the community and the broad panorama of the summit of the Anaktuvuk Pass. Named in honor of an early village leader and respected elder, the museum was established in 1986 through the efforts of the entire community, and is currently operated by the Planning Department of the North Slope Borough.

The museum’s exhibits focus upon the history, culture and traditional lifestyle of the Nunamiut. The Inland Iñupiat of the central Brooks Range. It hosts 1000 square feet of exhibit space, covering a variety of topics designed to draw a broad informative sketch of the Nunamiut way of life. Introductory panels begin by highlighting the origins and physical environment of the Brooks Range, as well as the origins and history of the Nunamiut themselves. These are followed by additional panels portraying their seasonal pattern of subsistence activities, ranging from hunting and fishing through trapping and trading. Strong emphasis is placed upon exhibits illustrating the importance of caribou as the foundation of the Nunamiut people’s economy, culture and once nomadic lifestyle. Their story is finally rounded out with a pictorial essay about the settling of America’s last group of nomadic Eskimos into the permanent village of Anaktuvuk Pass.

As the last remaining group of inland dwelling Nunamiut, the people of Anaktuvuk Pass possess a strong sense of uniqueness and cultural identity. The museum serves as an important resource for the elders and educators of the community to pass traditional knowledge, skills and values on to their young people by working in close cooperation with the North Slope Borough's Iñupiat History, Language, and Culture Commission and the North Slope Borough School District, to develop historical and cultural information for classroom use.

The information and pictures were provided by The Simon Peneak Museum

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