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The Tanana Athabaskans, Tanana Athabascans or Tanana Athapaskans are an Alaskan Athabaskan peoples of the Athabaskan-speaking ethnolinguistic group. They are the original inhabitants of the
Tanana River The Tanana River ( Lower Tanana: Tth'eetoo', Upper Tanana: ''Tth’iitu’ Niign'') is a tributary of the Yukon River in the U.S. state of Alaska. According to linguist and anthropologist William Bright, the name is from the Koyukon (Athabaska ...
(in
Tanana languages Lower Tanana (also Tanana and/or Middle Tanana) is an endangered language spoken in Interior Alaska in the lower Tanana River villages of Minto and Nenana. Of about 380 Tanana people in the two villages, about 30 still speak the language. As of ...
, literally 'straight water', in
Koyukon language Koyukon (also called ''Denaakk'e'') is the geographically most widespread Athabascan language spoken in Alaska. The Athabaskan language is spoken along the Koyukuk and the middle Yukon River in western interior Alaska. In 2007, the language had ...
, literally 'trail water') drainage basin in east-central
Alaska Interior Interior Alaska is the central region of Alaska's territory, roughly bounded by the Alaska Range to the south and the Brooks Range to the north. It is largely wilderness. Mountains include Denali in the Alaska Range, the Wrangell Mountains, and ...
, United States and a little part ( White River First Nation) lived in
Yukon Yukon (; ; formerly called Yukon Territory and also referred to as the Yukon) is the smallest and westernmost of Canada's three territories. It also is the second-least populated province or territory in Canada, with a population of 43,964 as ...
, Canada. Tanana River Athabaskan peoples are called in Lower Tanana and Koyukon language (literally 'trail people'), in Gwich'in language (literally 'people of Tanana River'). In Alaska, where they are the oldest, there are threeThe Map of Indigenous Peoples and Languages of Alaska
/ref> or four groups identified by the languages they speak. These are the Tanana proper or Lower Tanana () and/or Middle Tanana,
Tanacross Tanacross (also Transitional Tanana) is an endangered Athabaskan language spoken by fewer than 60 people in eastern Interior Alaska. Overview The word Tanacross (from " Tanana Crossing") has been used to refer both to a village in eastern ...
or Tanana Crossing (), and
Upper Tanana Upper Tanana (also known as Tabesna, Nabesna or Nee'aanèegn') is an endangered Athabaskan language spoken in eastern Interior Alaska, United States, mainly in the villages of Northway, Tetlin, and Tok, and adjacent areas of the Canadian ter ...
(). The Tanana Athabaskan culture is a hunter-gatherer culture and have a
matrilineal Matrilineality is the tracing of kinship through the female line. It may also correlate with a social system in which each person is identified with their matriline – their mother's lineage – and which can involve the inheritance ...
system. Tanana Athabaskans were
semi-nomadic A nomad is a member of a community without fixed habitation who regularly moves to and from the same areas. Such groups include hunter-gatherers, pastoral nomads (owning livestock), tinkers and trader nomads. In the twentieth century, the p ...
and as living in semi-permanent settlements in the
Tanana Valley The Tanana Valley is a lowland region in central Alaska in the United States, on the north side of the Alaska Range, where the Tanana River emerges from the mountains. Traditional inhabitants of the valley are Tanana Athabaskans of Alaskan Athab ...
lowlands. Traditional Athabaskan land use includes fall hunting of
moose The moose (in North America) or elk (in Eurasia) (''Alces alces'') is a member of the New World deer subfamily and is the only species in the genus ''Alces''. It is the largest and heaviest extant species in the deer family. Most adult ma ...
, caribou, Dall sheep, and small terrestrial animals, and also
trapping Animal trapping, or simply trapping or gin, is the use of a device to remotely catch an animal. Animals may be trapped for a variety of purposes, including food, the fur trade, hunting, pest control, and wildlife management. History Neolithi ...
. The Athabaskans did not have any formal tribal organization. Tanana Athabaskans were strictly territorial and used hunting and gathering practices in their semi-nomadic way of life and dispersed habitation patterns. Each small
band Band or BAND may refer to: Places *Bánd, a village in Hungary *Band, Iran, a village in Urmia County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran * Band, Mureș, a commune in Romania *Band-e Majid Khan, a village in Bukan County, West Azerbaijan Province, I ...
of 20–40 people normally had a central winter camp with several seasonal hunting and fishing camps, and they moved cyclically, depending on the season and availability of resources.Terry L. Haynes and William E. Simeone (2007)
Upper Tanana ethnographic overview and assessment, Wrangell St. Elias National Park and Preserve
Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Division of Subsistence. Technical Paper Number 325. [''This overview of Alaska Native history and culture in the upper Tanana region in eastern interior Alaska focuses on the predominantly Northern Athabascan Indian villages of Dot Lake, Healy Lake, Northway, Tanacross, and Tetlin.'']
Anne Shinkwin and Martha Case (1984)
Modern Foragers: Wild resource use in Nenana village, Alaska
Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Division of Subsistence. Technical Paper Number 91.
Alaska Native Knowledge Network

Written by Patricia H. Partnow
Their neighbors are other Athabaskan-speaking peoples: in Alaska
Koyukon The Koyukon (russian: Коюконы) are an Alaska Native Athabascan people of the Athabascan-speaking ethnolinguistic group. Their traditional territory is along the Koyukuk and Yukon rivers where they subsisted for thousands of years by ...
(north and northwest), Gwich'in (north and northeast),
Hän The Hän, Han or Hwëch'in / Han Hwech’in (meaning "People of the River, i.e. Yukon River", in English also Hankutchin) are a First Nations people of Canada and an Alaska Native Athabaskan people of the United States; they are part of the At ...
(northeast), Dena'ina (a little part of southwest), and Ahtna (south); in Canada Hän (northeast) and Northern and Southern Tutchone (east). The language of the
Upper Kuskokwim people The Upper Kuskokwim people or Upper Kuskokwim Athabaskans, Upper Kuskokwim Athabascans ( own native name ), and historically Kolchan, Goltsan, Tundra Kolosh, and McGrath Ingalik are an Alaskan Athabaskan people of the Athabaskan-speaking ethnolin ...
more closely related to Lower Tanana language, but not neighbor.


Bands

The homeland of the Tanana Athabaskan people can be generally divided into four distinct sections. 1) the Yukon Tanana upland draining to the Tanana River, 2) the Northway-Tanacross Lowlands, 3) the Eastern Alaskan range draining into the Tanana river, and 4) the Northern foothills.dice.missouri.edu
Tanana Description
/ref> The
Goodpaster River The Goodpaster River is an major tributary of the Tanana River in the U.S. state of Alaska. Its name in the Middle Tanana dialect of the Lower Tanana language is ''Jiiz Cheeg''. Goodpaster River is a stream located just 6.6 miles from Big Delt ...
, a 91-mile (146 km) tributary of the Tanana River, is considered to be a natural break in the Tanana Athabaskan language area, separating upriver speakers of the
Tanacross Tanacross (also Transitional Tanana) is an endangered Athabaskan language spoken by fewer than 60 people in eastern Interior Alaska. Overview The word Tanacross (from " Tanana Crossing") has been used to refer both to a village in eastern ...
and
Upper Tanana Upper Tanana (also known as Tabesna, Nabesna or Nee'aanèegn') is an endangered Athabaskan language spoken in eastern Interior Alaska, United States, mainly in the villages of Northway, Tetlin, and Tok, and adjacent areas of the Canadian ter ...
languages from the Lower (and Middle) Tanana speakers living farther downriver.McKennan, Robert A. 1969. Athabascan grouping and social organization in Central Alaska. In ''Contributions to Anthropology: Band Societies''. David Damas, ed. pp 93–114. National Museum of Canada bulletin 228. National Museum of Canada, Ottawa. The Tanana Athabaskans have a system of
matrilineal Matrilineality is the tracing of kinship through the female line. It may also correlate with a social system in which each person is identified with their matriline – their mother's lineage – and which can involve the inheritance ...
kinship. The Athabaskans loosely recognized membership in a larger bilateral group called ''regional band'' (or ''dialect group''), but the more important social unit was the ''local band'' (or ''family group'' or ''family/hunting units''). In the winter, the regional band might split up into smaller units, called local bands, each one made up of perhaps four nuclear families. The regional band might meet again at a predetermined place and time in mid-winter for a gathering ceremony called a potlatch, and then split up again for beaver and muskrat
trapping Animal trapping, or simply trapping or gin, is the use of a device to remotely catch an animal. Animals may be trapped for a variety of purposes, including food, the fur trade, hunting, pest control, and wildlife management. History Neolithi ...
. At the end of the 19th century there were twelve regional bands living in the Tanana Athabaskan homeland: six downriver bands (four Lower Tanana and two Middle Tanana) and six upriver bands (two Tanacross and four Upper Tanana).


Lower Tanana

The Lower Tanana regional bands: (language: proper dialect of Lower Tanana) *Minto band or Minto Flats band – inhabiting the Minto Flats and Old Minto () area. Neighbors: Gwich'in people (north),
Koyukon people The Koyukon (russian: Коюконы) are an Alaska Native Athabascan people of the Athabascan-speaking ethnolinguistic group. Their traditional territory is along the Koyukuk and Yukon rivers where they subsisted for thousands of years by ...
(west), Nenana-Toklat band (southwest), Wood River band (southeast), Chena band (east). *Nenana-Toklat band – inhabiting the
Nenana River The Nenana River ( taa, Nina No’) is a tributary of the Tanana River, approximately long, in central Alaska in the United States. It drains an area on the north slope of the Alaska Range on the south edge of the Tanana Valley southwest of Fai ...
(),
Nenana Valley Nenana Valley is an archaeological site in the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area of Alaska. The site was first occupied around 11,000 years ago (early Holocene) and represents one of the earliest known sites in Arctic North America. The location of arti ...
and Toklat River () area. Neighbors: Koyukon people (west), Dena'ina people (south), Minto band (north), Wood River band (east). *Wood River band – inhabiting the
Wood River Wood River may refer to: Rivers In Canada * Wood River (British Columbia), a tributary of the Columbia River via Kinbasket Lake * Wood River (Saskatchewan), a river in south-west Saskatchewan In Ireland * Wood River (County Clare), Kilru ...
area. Neighbors: Dena'ina people (south), Nenana-Toklat band (west), Minto and Chena bands (north), Salcha band (east). *Chena band — inhabiting the Chena River and Chena Village () area (also formerly Fairbanks area). Neighbors: Gwich'in people (north), Minto band (west), Salcha band (east).


Middle Tanana

The Middle Tanana regional bands: (language: extinct (1993) separate dialect of Lower Tanana. Some authors consider the Salcha-Goodpaster dialect of Lower Tanana to be a distinct language, known as Middle Tanana. Linguist
James Kari James Kari is a linguist and Professor Emeritus with the Alaska Native Language Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) specializing in the Dene (a.k.a. Athabascan languages) of Alaska. In the past forty-five years he has done extensiv ...
has been a strong advocate for Middle Tanana, referring to the former language of the Salcha-Goodpaster bands along the middle Tanana River) *Salcha(ket) band – inhabiting the
Salcha River The Salcha River (Lower Tanana: ''Sołchaget'') is a tributary of the Tanana River in the U.S. state of Alaska. Rising in the eastern part of the Fairbanks North Star Borough east of Fort Wainwright, it flows generally west-southwest to meet the ...
() area. Neighbors: Hän people (northeast), Ahtna people (south), Chena band (north), Wood River band (west), Delta-Goodpaster band (east). *(Big) Delta-Goodpaster band – inhabiting the Big Delta, Alaska, Big Delta, Delta River (incl. Delta Junction, Alaska, Delta Junction and Deltana, Alaska, Deltana) and
Goodpaster River The Goodpaster River is an major tributary of the Tanana River in the U.S. state of Alaska. Its name in the Middle Tanana dialect of the Lower Tanana language is ''Jiiz Cheeg''. Goodpaster River is a stream located just 6.6 miles from Big Delt ...
() area. Neighbors: Hän people (northeast), Ahtna people (south), Salcha band (north and west), Healy River-Joseph band (east).


Tanacross

The Tanacross (Tanana Crossing; first documented by Ferdinand von Wrangel in 1839 as Copper River Kolchan) regional bands: (language:
Tanacross Tanacross (also Transitional Tanana) is an endangered Athabaskan language spoken by fewer than 60 people in eastern Interior Alaska. Overview The word Tanacross (from " Tanana Crossing") has been used to refer both to a village in eastern ...
) *Healy River-Joseph band – inhabiting the formerly Joseph Village (), Healy Lake, Alaska, Healy Lake (), Knik Glacier, Lake George (), Sam Lake (official United States Geological Survey name is Sand Lake – ) area. Neighbors: Delta-Goodpaster band (west), Hän people (north), Ahtna people (south), Mansfeld-Kechumstuk band (west), Healy River-Joseph band (east). *Mansfeld-Kechumstuk band — inhabiting nowadays Tanacross, Alaska, Tanacross () and Dot Lake, Alaska, Dot Lake (), formerly Ketchumsuk (), Mosquito Fork, Mansfield Lake, Alaska, Lake Mansfield (), Mansfield Hill (), Old Mansfield Village (), Mansfield Village (), Robertson River (), Tok River State Recreation Site, Tok River (), Tok, Alaska, Tok area. Neighbors: Healy River-Joseph band (west), Hän people (north), Ahtna people (south), Tetlin-Last Tetlin band (east). ** ('Mansfield area people') ** ('Ketchumstuck people', lit. 'inland area people').


Upper Tanana

The Upper Tanana regional bands: (language:
Upper Tanana Upper Tanana (also known as Tabesna, Nabesna or Nee'aanèegn') is an endangered Athabaskan language spoken in eastern Interior Alaska, United States, mainly in the villages of Northway, Tetlin, and Tok, and adjacent areas of the Canadian ter ...
) *Tetlin-Last Tetlin band – formerly inhabiting the Tetlin (), Last Tetlin () and Tetlin Lake area (nowadays Tetlin, Alaska, Tetlin). Neighbors: Mansfeld-Kechumstuk band (west), Hän people (north), Ahtna people (south), Lower Nabesna band (east). *Lower Nabesna band — formerly inhabiting the Northway, Jol, Nabesna, Alaska, Nabesna Village, Gardiner Creek (''Cheejil Niign''), Nabesna River (lower), Chisana River (lower) area (nowadays Northway, Alaska, Northway). Neighbors: Tetlin-Last Tetlin band (west), Hän people (north), Ahtna people (south), Scottie Creek band (east). *Scottie Creek band — formerly inhabiting the Scottie Creek area (nowadays in Alaska Northway; in Canada Whitehorse, Yukon and Beaver Creek, Yukon, called as White River First Nation). Neighbors: Lower Nabesna band (west), Hän people (north), Ahtna people (south), Northern Tutchone language, Northern Tutchone people of Canada (east). *Upper Nabesna-Upper Chisana/Upper Chisana-Upper Nabesna band (own name 'among the mountain people'James J. Simon and Caroline L. Brown (2010)
Customary and traditional use worksheet: Chisana Caribou Herd, GMU 12, Upper Tanana–White River Area
/ref>) – formerly inhabiting the Nabesna, Alaska, Nabesna, Nabesna River (upper), Chisana, Alaska, Chisana River (upper), Cross Creek (''Nach'etay Cheeg''), Chisana area (nowadays Northway, Mentasta, Chistochina). Neighbors: Ahtna people (west), other Upper Tanana bands (north), Southern Tutchone language, Southern Tutchone people of Canada (east).


Prehistory

Archaeological sites in Alaska (East Beringia) are where some of the earliest evidence has been found of Paleo-Indians.
Alaska Interior Interior Alaska is the central region of Alaska's territory, roughly bounded by the Alaska Range to the south and the Brooks Range to the north. It is largely wilderness. Mountains include Denali in the Alaska Range, the Wrangell Mountains, and ...
or Interior Alaska has been continuously inhabited for the last 14,000U.S. Army Garrison, Fort Wainwright
Integrated Cultural Resources Management Plan
April 2013
~ 12,000 years, and evidence of this continuum of human (ancestors of the Athabaskans) activity is preserved within and around Fort Wainwright's training lands. Interior Alaska's icefree status during the last glacial period provided a corridor connecting the Bering Land Bridge and northeastern Asia (West Beringia/Siberia) to North America. The earliest cultural remains in interior Alaska, as on the coast, are chipped stone blade complexes about 10,000 years old, with close relationships to Siberian materials. In February 2008 a proposal connecting Asiatic Yeniseian languages of central Siberia to American Na-Dené languages (Athabaskan–Eyak–Tlingit) into a Dené–Yeniseian languages, Dené–Yeniseian family was published and well received by a number of linguists.Dene–Yeniseic Symposium
University of Alaska Fairbanks, February 2008, accessed March 30, 2010
The homeland of the Athabaskan languages is northwestern Canada and southern/eastern Alaska. After initial colonization, archaeologists generally divide Interior Alaska's Prehistory of Alaska, prehistory into three broad archaeological themes:


Paleo-Arctic tradition

''Paleo-Arctic tradition'' (12,000–6,000 years ago) is a term is now generally used by archaeologists to refer to the earliest settled people known from all over Alaska. In Interior Alaska, Paleoarctic tradition historically included two cultural divisions called the Nenana and Denali complexes.


Nenana complex

The Nenana complex was defined by W. R. Powers and John F. Hoffecker. The Nenana complex began approximately 11,000 years ago and this complex is widely regarded as part of the Paleo-Indians, Palaeoindian tradition and a likely Beringian progenitor of the Clovis Complex. Many Nenana Complex archaeological sites are located in the
Tanana Valley The Tanana Valley is a lowland region in central Alaska in the United States, on the north side of the Alaska Range, where the Tanana River emerges from the mountains. Traditional inhabitants of the valley are Tanana Athabaskans of Alaskan Athab ...
: Broken Mammoth, Moose Creek, Alaska, Chugwater, Donnelly Ridge, Healy Lake, Alaska, Healy Lake, Mead, and Swan Point, Alaska, Swan Point.


Denali complex

The Denali complex, dated roughly to 10,500 to 8,000 years ago, was originally defined by F. H West. Some Denali Complex archaeological sites: Mt. Hayes, Swan Point, and Gerstle River. Both Nenana and Denali technology persist in central Alaska throughout the Holocene. The relationship between the proposed Nenana and Denali complexes is as of yet unresolved. The boreal forest in Interior Alaska (Interior Alaska-Yukon lowland taiga of Tanana region and Copper Plateau taiga of Ahtna region) was established 8,000 years ago. Two ice-age infants discovered at an ancient residential campsite (Upward Sun River site was first discovered in 2006) in Interior Alaska near the Tanana River east of Fairbanks are the oldest human remains ever found in the North American Arctic and Subarctic, and among the oldest discovered on the entire continent, according to researchers with the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Discovered in 2013, the remains of the two infants date from 11,500 years ago, near the end of the Last glacial period, last ice age.


Northern Archaic tradition

The Northern Archaic tradition flourished 6,000–1,000 years ago. Site density increased again after about 6,000 years ago in Interior Alaska. This population increase coincides roughly with the Northern Archaic Tradition and the appearance of side-notched projectile points. Douglas D. Anderson originally defined the Northern Archaic Tradition to specifically address notched point bearing stratigraphic horizons that did not contain microblades at the Onion Portage site (Onion Portage Archeological District of Kobuk Malimiut tribes of Inupiat people region) in northern Alaska. Notched point assemblages occur in many sites in Interior Alaska, including over one dozen on Army's Fort Wainwright lands. Several sites, including the excavated Banjo Lake site in Donnelly Training Area, have also produced middle Holocene dates from hearth charcoal. The 6,300- to 6,700-year-old dates from Banjo Lake were also associated with a microblade component.


Athabascan tradition

The Athabaskan tradition flourished 1,300–800 years ago. Linguistic evidence suggests that the Athabaskan culture may have appeared in the Tanana Valley as early as 2,500 years ago. Through ethnography, oral history, and a broad array of cultural items, much has been learned about Athabaskan culture and history in the region. Artifacts associated the Athabaskan culture are exceptionally diverse and include bone and antler projectile points, fishhooks, beads, buttons, birch bark trays, and bone gaming pieces. In the Upper Tanana region, native copper (from trading with Ahtna people or "Copper Indians") was available and used in addition to the traditional material types to manufacture tools such as knives, projectile points, awls, ornaments, and axes. A late prehistoric Athabaskan occupation is recognized at several sites in and around U.S. Army Garrison, Fort Wainwright's training lands. The Athabaskan Tradition includes late prehistoric and proto-historic cultures generally believed to be the ancestors of Athabascan tribes who currently inhabit Interior Alaska. Excavated Athabaskan sites are rare, but the limited body of evidence allows for several generalizations. Athabascan settlement patterns depended greatly on the availability of subsistence resources, and Interior bands lived a nomadic lifestyle.


History

Ernest S. Burch (1980) defined a four-period scheme reflecting the major historical events and their impact on the Alaska Natives (Alaskan Eskimos and Athabaskan peoples): # the ''Early Historic period'' (1816–1838) is earliest contact with natives can be reckoned from the explorative coastal expedition of James Cook in 1778. # the ''Fragmentation period'' (1838–1897) is saw far-reaching disruption and change of traditional native subsistence and settlement patterns. # the ''Colonial period'' (1898–1960) is marked by the abrupt influx of large numbers of non-native peoples during the Gold mining in Alaska, gold rush era. # the ''Native Claims period'' (1960–1977) is pre and post Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA). Russian fur traders (and promyshlenniki [According to American historian and ethnologist Hubert Howe Bancroft, the Cossacks themselves were a light troop, but they were preceded by a still lighter, a flying advance guard, called the ''promyshleniki'', a kind of Russian ''coureurs des bois''.The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft, Volume XXXIII: History of Alaska 1730–1885. San Francisco, 1886] for North American fur trade and maritime fur trade) of the period of the Russian America (1733–1867) began settling Interior Alaska starting in the 1810s, establishing a trading post at Nulato, Alaska, Nulato on the Yukon River (of Koyukon homeland) and one (in the 1819 ''Copper Fort'') at Taral (Russian Тарал, native Ahtna name ''Taghaelden'') on the Copper River (Alaska), Copper River (of Ahtna homeland). British traders established Fort Yukon, Alaska, Fort Yukon (of Gwich'in homeland) in 1847. Trade goods from these posts may have passed to Lower and Upper Tanana Athabaskans through intra-Native trade networks. Direct contact between Tanana Athabaskans and white traders increased after the 1860s. With the U.S. Alaska Purchase, purchase of Alaska in 1867, control of trading stations and the fur trade passed to Americans. Through the 1880s, American traders established several additional posts on the Yukon and Tanana rivers, including locations at Nuklukayet (modern-day Tanana, Alaska, Tanana of Koyukon people homeland), Belle Isle (modern-day Eagle, Alaska, Eagle of Hän people homeland), and Fort Yukon. The Tanana River area has a documented Euroamerican history of less than 130 years, and like the Tanana Athabaskan history. The ''Nucha'la'woy'ya'' (or anglicized ''Nuchalawoya'' lit. 'where the two rivers meet') or ''Noochuloghoyet'' (lit «the point of the big river peninsula»Jones, E. 1986. Koyukon ethnography. Alaska Historical Commission studies in history, No. 17 1. Fairbanks: University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska Native Language Center. 78 p. and historically: ''Nukluroyit, Nuclavyette, Nukluklayet, Nukiukahyet, Nuklukait,, Nuklaciyat, Nuklukyat, Noukelakayet, Tuklukyet'' (modern-day Tanana, Alaska, Tanana) was a traditional trading settlement for Koyukon and Tanana Athabaskans long before European contact. With the beginning of Euro-American contact in Interior Alaska in the early 19th century, trade influences and influxes of new populations began to change life in the region. Land use patterns shifted from traditional indigenous uses to activities based on Euro-American economic and political systems. As Euro-American Merchant, traders (merchants), miners, missionaries and explorers moved into the
Tanana Valley The Tanana Valley is a lowland region in central Alaska in the United States, on the north side of the Alaska Range, where the Tanana River emerges from the mountains. Traditional inhabitants of the valley are Tanana Athabaskans of Alaskan Athab ...
, the traditional life ways of local Athabaskan groups were disrupted. Access to trade goods and the development of the fur trade not only affected traditional material culture, but also began to dramatically affect subsistence activities and settlement patterns. Similarly, the arrival of missionaries in the Alaskan Interior profoundly influenced traditional social organization. The introduction of mission schools for Native children and the doctrine of new religious beliefs contributed to an erosion of traditional ecological knowledge and other traditional practices. After the Alaska Purchase in 1867, most of the Koyukon were converted by either Catholic or Protestant denominations, and by 1900 virtually all Alaskan Athabaskans were Christians at least by name if not entirely by practice.Shannon Michele McNeeley (2009)
Seasons out of balance climate change impacts, vulnerability, and sustainable adaptation in Interior Alaska
Fairbanks, Alaska, August 2009
An influenza epidemic in 1920 claimed one-fourth of the Lower Tanana Athabaskan population of Nenana, Alaska, Nenana (''Toghotili'').


Hunting-gathering

The homeland of Tanana Athabaskans is the Köppen climate classification, Dfc climate type Subarctic climate, subarctic boreal forest of Nearctic realm, called Interior Alaska-Yukon lowland taiga. Their lands are located in different two ecoregions: # The south of Tanana River, called ''Tanana-Kuskokwim Lowlands'' and this ecoregion forms an arch north of the Alaska Range and Lime Hills. Native people of the lowlands are mainly Koyukon, Tanana, and Kuskokwim Athabaskans. Main communities are Fairbanks, North Pole, Alaska, North Pole, Tok, Alaska, Tok, and Delta Junction, Alaska, Delta Junction. # The north of Tanana River, called ''Yukon-Tanana Uplands'' and this ecoregion forms are rounded mountains and hills located between the Yukon and Tanana Rivers and spanning the Alaska-Yukon Territory border. Native people of the uplands are Tanacross, Tanana, and Hän Athabaskans. Main communities are Fox, Alaska, Fox, Ester, Alaska, Ester, and Eagle, Alaska, Eagle. Tanana Athabaskans were
semi-nomadic A nomad is a member of a community without fixed habitation who regularly moves to and from the same areas. Such groups include hunter-gatherers, pastoral nomads (owning livestock), tinkers and trader nomads. In the twentieth century, the p ...
hunter-gatherers who moved seasonally throughout the year within a reasonably well-defined territory to harvest fish, bird, mammal, berry and other renewable resources. The Tanana territories generally is a mosaic of open and closed spruce forests covering the low gradient outwash slope between the Alaska Range and the flats and ridges north of the Tanana River. The economy of Tanana Athabaskans is a mixed cash-subsistence system, like other modern foraging economies in Alaska. The subsistence economy is main non-monetary economy system. Cash is often a rare commodity in foraging economies, because of lack of employment opportunities or perceived conflicts in the demands of wage employment and subsistence harvesting activities. The primary use of wild resources is domestic. Wild resource use in many Athabaskan villages is overwhelmingly for domestic consumption, since commercial fishing in Alaska is absent. Commercial fishing and trapping patterns are controlled primarily by external factors. The state's limited entry system, operational by 1974 (after ANCSA), limits the number of available fishing permits for commercial salmon (esp. the Pacific salmon ''Oncorhynchus'' species for salmon cannery) fishing. In Nenana, about one-third of households have a permit. Most (70%) sample households with a permit used. Those with a permit that did not fish commercially, did fish for subsistence.
Hunting was associated with seasonal movements along trails and frozen rivers, particularly as bands moved between rivers and uplands. The primarily hunting animals for Tanana Athabaskans are big animals (caribou, moose, and wild sheep). Most valuable hunting animal is the caribou (subspecies ''Rangifer tarandus granti'', Lower Tanana , Tanacross '','' Upper Tanana ). The caribou was the most important food animal in the Upper Tanana before the coming of the non-natives and resultant disintegration of the original nomadic patterns.Vitt, R. B. 1971. Hunting practices of the Upper Tanana Athapaskans. Department of Anthropology, Thesis (M.A.), University of Alaska. The economic life of the Upper Tanana centers around the caribou. Not only does the animal constitute the source of food for the natives and their dogs, but also it supplies the material for their clothing, shelters, and boats as well as netting for their snowshoes and babiche and sinew for their snares, cords, and lashings.McKennan, Robert A. 1959. The Upper Tanana Indians. Yale University Publications in Anthropology, no. 55, New Haven, Connecticut. The caribou hunt occurred in the early summer and mid-summer. Caribou hunting during the fall migration involved the use of fence, corral, and snare complexes and was a seasonal activity critical to the survival of the Tanana people. Today, most caribou meat is typically used fresh, or is frozen for later use. The
moose The moose (in North America) or elk (in Eurasia) (''Alces alces'') is a member of the New World deer subfamily and is the only species in the genus ''Alces''. It is the largest and heaviest extant species in the deer family. Most adult ma ...
(subspecies ''Alces alces gigas'', Lower Tanana , Tanacross '','' Upper Tanana ) was other most important food animal for Tanana Athabaskans. Moose hunting is the most common resource harvesting activity among Lower Tanana Athabaskan bands. Moose hunting is always a popular activity in modern Athabaskan communities because of the meat's economic value and a food preference for large game. Moose hunting in the fall was either an individual pursuit or group activity. Moose meat was eaten fresh or preserved. The Mansfeld-Kechumstuk band of Tanacross employed several methods to hunt Dall sheep (in Alaskan English simply ''sheep'', Lower Tanana , Tanacross , Upper Tanana ) in late summer and early fall in local mountainous areas or as far south as the Mentasta Mountains. Dall sheep were a desired source of food and material for clothing and tools. Migratory waterfowl (ducks, goose, geese, and swans) and upland game birds (Lagopus, ptarmigans and grouse) were a valued source of fresh meat. Grouse (spruce grouse, sharp-tailed grouse, ruffed grouse Lower Tanana , Tanacross , Upper Tanana ) and ptarmigan (willow ptarmigan and rock ptarmigan Lower Tanana , Tanacross , Upper Tanana ) were taken opportunistically throughout the year with bow and arrows or with snares and fence-snare arrangements. Ducks and geese were easily captured when molting. Men in birchbark canoes quietly approached waterfowl in bays and coves and shot them with bow and arrows. Women and children then caught the birds and collected eggs from their nests. Fishing (creek and river) was done near the village sites, and the fish were stored in large subsurface caches and is domestic and most common. The main economical fish (Tanacross , Upper Tanana ) species are mostly whitefish (humpback whitefish, round whitefish Tanacross ) and Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, king (chinook) Upper Tanana , Tanacross , Oncorhynchus nerka, red (sockeye) Upper Tanana , Tanacross ). Other fish species are Esox lucius, pike (Upper Tanana , Tanacross ), Thymallus arcticus, grayling (Lower Tanana , Upper Tanana , Tanacross ), Lota lota, lingcod (Upper Tanana and Tanacross ) and Catostomus catostomus, sucker (Upper Tanana , Tanacross ). Fishing at Mansfield Lake and Fish Creek for whitefish, pike, and grayling began in the late spring and continued until mid-July and was a major harvest activity; whitefish was an especially important and perennially reliable food source. All band members except the very young children assisted in harvesting and processing the catch. The spring fish harvest provided a welcome dietary change after a long winter of eating mostly dried fish and meat. Fish not eaten fresh were processed and dried on drying racks for later consumption. Both fresh and dried fish were cooked in boiling water, produced by placing heated stones into a birch bark basket. The white spruce (''Picea glauca'') and black spruce (''Picea mariana'') are the dominant tree, with its maximum tree line being held at around 4,000 feet. Above this limit only stunted willows and alders are found. In the lowlands, several ferns such as the Matteuccia struthiopteris, ostrich, Dryopteris, wood, Phegopteris, beech and Gymnocarpium dryopteris, oak fern are found. Beginning in late spring and continuing throughout the summer and early fall months, both adults and children gathered a variety of plants and vegetative materials. Fruit and berry, berries (Lower Tanana , Tanacross , Upper Tanana ), edible roots (esp. Indian potato or wild carrot ''Hedysarum alpinum'' Lower Tanana ), and assorted plants (esp. wild rhubarb ''Polygonum alaskanum'') were eaten fresh, preserved for later consumption, or used for medicinal purposes. Birch bark of paper birch (Lower Tanana , Tanacross and Upper Tanana ) and spruce roots (Tanacross ) were needed to make baskets, cooking vessels, tools, cradleboards, and canoes. The Upper Tanana use lingonberries (Vaccinium vitis-idaea) as a food source. They boil the berries with sugar and flour to thicken, eat the raw berries, either plain or mixing them with sugar, grease or the combination of the two, fry them in grease with sugar or dried fish eggs, and make them into pies, jam, and jelly. They also preserve the berries alone or in grease and store them in a birchbark basket in an underground cache, or freeze them.Kari, Priscilla Russe, 1985, Upper Tanana Ethnobotany, Anchorage. Alaska Historical Commission, page 9 They also use them in their traditional medicine, eating the berries or using the juice of the berries for colds, coughs, and sore throats.


Kinship

The Tanana kinship is based on what is formally known as an Iroquois kinship and reflects the
matrilineal Matrilineality is the tracing of kinship through the female line. It may also correlate with a social system in which each person is identified with their matriline – their mother's lineage – and which can involve the inheritance ...
clan system and the importance of cross cousin marriage. Individuals in the Tanana society are born into their mother's clan. Their society was and still is composed of eight or nine matrilineal clans that are arranged in exogamous Moiety (kinship), moieties named Raven (or Crow) and Sea Gull (or Wolf). Marriage was supposed to take place between a man and woman who are from opposite clan.


Culture


Religion


Animism and shamanism

Historically and traditionally, Tanana and other all Alaskan Athabaskans are practice animism and Shamanism among Alaska Natives, shamanism. The animistic belief system common to all Alaskan Athabaskan groups might be briefly characterized as follows: All creatures, and some inanimate objects, had spirits which were active and powerful components of those creatures. The spirits enabled an animal to know more than was immediately apparent to him. Thus, if human beings did something which displeased the animal's spirit, the animal itself would remain aloof from the people, and the people might starve. There were very definite rules which people had to follow in dealing with animals based on this belief in animal spirits. Aboriginally and in early historic times the ''shaman'', called as ''medicine man'' or ''medicine woman''Mike Gaffney 2011
Alaska Native in traditional times: a cultural profile project
Alaska Native Knowledge Network
(Tanacross Upper Tanana ) was the central figure of Athabaskan religious life. The shaman within this culture was the middle man/woman between spirits and the native peoples. Magicoreligious practices included omens, charms, amulets, songs, taboos, and beliefs about the supernatural. Beliefs and practices were associated with certain animals, and many centered on hunting. Animal spirits appear to have predominated in Tanana spiritual life, although an evil spirit was manifested in a half-man, half-animal being. Spirits were influential in the activities of the living and in guiding the dead to their final resting place. Athabaskan shamans guarded people against the effects of bad spirits. The shaman also diagnosed various illnesses and restored the health of those harmed by bad spirits. The shaman could also provide the valuable service of scapulimancy, which predicted the location of game when hunting was scarce.''Native People of Alaska''. Greatland Graphics, 2002, p. 92 According to cultural anthropologist Richard Nelson (author), Richard K. Nelson (who lived for extended periods in Alaskan Athabaskan villages), Athabaskan traditions teach that everything in nature is fundamentally spiritual and must be treated with respect. This includes not only avoiding waste, but also following an elaborate code of morality toward plants, animals, and the earth itself. For example, if an Upper Tanana man kills a wolf, he should never touch it until he formally apologizes and explains that his family needs it.Richard Nelson (author), Nelson, Richard K. 1986. "Raven's People" in J. Aigner, Ed. ''Interior Alaska'' (Anchorage: Alaska Geographic Society, 1986) The taboos (Tanacross , Upper Tanana ) are animistic forbidden. In addition to adhering to a code of behavior, people observed a variety of taboos designed to prevent misfortune or bad luck. Many of these taboos were associated with hunting or some other aspect of the food gathering process, thus underscoring the importance of these activities for survival of the group. Ravens, Crane (bird), cranes, wolverines, foxes, otters, and dogs must never be eaten. The heads of caribou, moose, and Dall sheep may not be fed to the dogs; to do so would bring the hunter poor luck. Neither the bones nor the carcasses of fur-bearing animals may be fed to dogs, but must be cached in a safe place. Should the dogs get them the hunter will take no more fur. Women of child-bearing age did not eat bear (Grizzly or Alaskan Grizzly bear, brown bear and American black bear, black bear). Young boys could not eat fat from around an animal's eye until adulthood. No animals except dogs could be brought up as pets.


Christianity

The Interior Athabaskans for the most part were contacted and missionized by Roman Catholic (for Koyukon Athabaskans), Russian Orthodox (for Dena'ina, Ahtna, Deg Hit'an, Holikachuk, Upper Kuskokwim Athabaskans), and Anglican missionaries (for Gwich'in, Hän, Tanana Athabaskans). Christian missionaries of the Episcopal Church (United States), Episcopal Church established churches and missions in the area of Tanana Athabaskan beginning in the early 1900s. In 1905 the Episcopal Church, which had missionaries in Alaska, built the St. Mark's Episcopal mission and Tortella (''Toghotili'', nowadays Nenana) School a short distance upriver. The boarding school taught about 28 children of various ages at a time.Guide to Collection: St. Mark's Mission, Nenana, Alaska; "Biographical/Historical Note"
, 2010, State of Alaska Library, accessed September 22, 2013
Hudson Stuck, the Archdeacon of the Yukon, regularly visited the settlement, part of the 250,000 square-acre territory of the Interior he administered. Native Athabaskan children from other communities, such as Minto, Alaska, Minto, also attended school in Nenana.


Potlatches

The The potlatch among Athabaskan peoples, Athabaskan potlatch (Tanacross , Upper Tanana ) or the ''gathering-up ceremony'' is a mid-winter ceremonial activities of traditional potlatch among Athabaskan peoples. This was one event at which people from different local and even regional bands met. The several regional bands attending a potlatch might have spoken slightly different dialects which were nonetheless close enough to each other to be mutually intelligible. The importance of potlatches in establishing friendly ties with outside groups has already been discussed: marriages and trade partnership often grew out of association at a potlatch. The potlatch usually lasted for a week. The most elaborate of Athabaskan potlatches was the funeral potlatch (or memorial potlatch, mortuary potlatch). The funeral potlatch marks the separation of the deceased from and is the last public expression of grief.William Simeone, ''A History of Alaskan Athapaskans'', 1982, Alaska Historical CommissionWilliam Simeone,''Rifles, Blankets, and Beads'', 1995, University of Oklahoma Press, Memorial potlatches are held by family members of a deceased person one year after the death. It is a mourning opportunity as well as one to honor the deceased. Other potlatches were held to demonstrate the wealth, prosperity or luck of a person: the more potlatches, the greater the wealth. Fresh moose meat is essential to the Athabaskan funeral potlatch. Today, the most well-known potlatch is Nuchalawoyya Potlatch of the Native Village of Tanana. Archaeological evidence of potlatching is found at the 1000 year-old Pickupsticks site near Shaw Creek in the Middle Tanana Valley.


Literature

The Upper Tanana area has a rich storytelling tradition. Old-time stories are known in many Northern Athabaskan languages under several different labels. They are set in mythical times, when animals and humans could still communicate. Traditionally, stories were told in the evenings in winter in a group setting and are told to educate the young.


Art

The arts of the Tanana Athabaskans are classified in the Alaska Native art. Birch bark baskets are the most common type of basketry made by Athabaskan women. Today birch bark is used primarily for baskets made for sale and for bark baby carriers.Susan W. Fair (2006)
Alaska Native Art: Tradition, Innovation, Continuity
University of Alaska Press


Cuisine

The Alaskan Athabaskan Indian ice-cream (Alaska), Indian ice-cream (Lower Tanana , Tanacross ) is dessert-like dry meat mixed with moose fat and different from the Canadian Indian ice cream (Canada), Indian ice cream of First Nations in British Columbia. One recipe for Indian ice cream consisted of dried and pulverized tenderloin that was blended with moose grease in a birch bark container until the mixture was light and fluffy. In addition, however, Alaskan Athabaskan communities also create songs for performance at potlatches: dance songs, potlatch songs and mourning songs. Within stories and embedded in fragments of folklore, old shamanic songs are also partially remembered; they are called "ice‐cream songs" because they used to be sung during the preparation of , or "Indian ice cream."Siri G. Tuttle
Language and music in the songs of Minto, Alaska
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Transportation

Historically and traditionally, the transportation of Alaskan Athabaskans is pedestrian transportation and they are traveling on foot (in winter also birchbark snowshoes). Caribou were also pursued individually on snowshoes during winter by hunters using bow and arrow. Athabascan women regularly Baby transport, carry their children with the help of a baby belt. Dog (Lower Tanana , Tanacross ) use in many Athabaskan villages is overwhelmingly for hunting and as pack animals. Dog sleds (Lower Tanana , Tanacross ) are an ancient and widespread means of transportation for Eskimo peoples (western central Alaskan Central Alaskan Yup'ik people, Yup'ik people and northern and northwestern Alaskan Inupiat people), but when non-Native fur traders and explorers first traveled the Yukon River and other interior regions in the mid-19th century, they observed that only a few Athabascan groups, including the Koyukon, Deg Hit'an and Holikachuk, used dogs in this way. Both of these peoples had probably learned the technique from their Iñupiat or Yup'ik Eskimo neighbors. The Gwich'in, Tanana, Ahtna and others pulled their sleds and toboggans by hand, using dogs solely for hunting and as pack animals.Alaska Native Collections : ''łeendenaalyoye'' “old-style dog harness”
Source: Clark 1974:141; Hadleigh West 1963:231; Hosley 1981:537; McKennan 1959:91, 1965:41; Mischler 1995:647; Nelson 1973:170–173; Osgood 1936:27,1940:353-358)
Dogs sometimes were used to drive the moose into the fence and snares.


Modern tribal unions

Historically, the Tanana Athabaskan people did not think of themselves as living in "Tribe (Native American), tribes," a relatively recent term connected with political recognition by the U.S. government.


Tribal entities

Alaska Native List of Alaska Native tribal entities, tribal entities for Tanana Athabaskans are recognized by the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs:


ANCSA

The Alaska Native Regional Corporations of Tanana Athabaskans were established in 1971 when the United States Congress passed the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA).


Tanana Chiefs Conference

The Tanana Chiefs Conference is a traditional tribal consortium of the all Central Alaskan Athabaskans (or Interior Athabaskans), with the exception of the Southern Alaskan Athabaskans (or Southern Athabaskans: Dena'ina and Ahtna). On the broad cultural profile factors of regional environment, land use and occupancy, and social organization, Southern Athabaskans (Dena'ina and Ahtna) life more closely resembled the other southern Native societies. In the North, the life of the Interior Athabaskans more closely resembled other northern Native societies. *Yukon-Tanana Subregion **Minto Traditional Council, Minto, Alaska, Minto, members are Minto band of Lower Tanana **Nenana Traditional Council, Nenana, Alaska, Nenana, members are Nenana-Toklat band of Lower Tanana *Upper Tanana Subregion **Dot Lake Village Council, Dot Lake Village, Alaska, Dot Lake, members are Mansfeld-Kechumstuk band of Tanacross **Healy Lake Traditional Council, Healy Lake, Alaska, Healy Lake, members are Healy River-Joseph band of Tanacross **Tanacross IRA Council, Tanacross, Alaska, Tanacross, members are Mansfeld-Kechumstuk band of Tanacross **Tok Native Association, Tok, Alaska, Tok, members are Mansfeld-Kechumstuk band of Tanacross **Northway Traditional Council, Northway Village, Alaska, Northway, members are Lower Nabesna band of Upper Tanana **Tetlin IRA Council, Tetlin, Alaska, Tetlin, members are Tetlin-Last Tetlin band of Upper Tanana


Sources of language materials in Tanana languages

Lower Tanana language: *Kari, James 1991. Lower Tanana Athabaskan listening and writing exercises. Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center Tanacross language: *Arnold, I. S., G. Holton, and R. Thoman 2009.Tanacross Learnersʼ Dictionary. Upper Tanana language: *Milanowski, Paul G. & John, Alfred. 1979. Nee'aaneegn'/Upper Tanana (Tetlin) Junior Dictionary. Anchorage: National Bilingual Materials Development Center.


Further reading

*Terry L. Haynes and William E. Simeone (2007)
Upper Tanana ethnographic overview and assessment, Wrangell St. Elias National Park and Preserve
Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Division of Subsistence. Technical Paper Number 325. [''This overview of Alaska Native history and culture in the upper Tanana region in eastern interior Alaska focuses on the predominantly Northern Athabascan Indian villages of Dot Lake, Healy Lake, Northway, Tanacross, and Tetlin.'']. Only included Upriver Tanana (Tanacross and Upper Tanana) bands, excluded Downriver Tanana (Lower and Middle Tanana) bands.


References

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