List of Alaska Native inventors and scientists

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]

Alaska Native Science and Engineering Program

For more than century, Alaska Native naturalists have entered into collaborative relationships with scientists working in the field or in their communities (International Polar Year (IPY), Native Contributions to Arctic Science,[4] Barrow Arctic Research Center). Their many contributions extend from indigenous ways of knowing to practical and applied inventions needed to subsist from the land, air, and waters (Sharing Knowledge Smithsonian Exhibit).

As institutions strive to decolonize, indigenous-settler relationships remain contentious and marked by structural inequities. In the history of the New World, Old World explorers and settlers often relied for their survival on the knowledge and wisdom of indigenous peoples.[5]

While this list focuses on individual biographies, it is worth noting the many exemplary collaborative projects (e.g., Barrow Arctic Research Center). In addition to recognizing community-based participatory research (CBPR), this list credits the organizations that develop and advocate for the education of future indigenous scientists and engineers, young scholars who will increase the number of indigenous scientists and engineers earning degrees. According to a 2019 report from the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, fewer than 1% of bachelor’s degrees in science and engineering programs go to American Indian, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, or other Pacific Islanders. These organizations include American Indian Science and Engineering Society (AISES) and Alaska Native Science and Engineering Program (ANSEP).

Inventors and scientists

Name Years Tribal

Affiliation

Degree

Knowledge area

Citations
Billy Adams 1965- Iñupiat Utqiagvik - NSB Department of Wildlife Management - extensive experience (30+ years) working with scientists, and continues to inform marine mammal and ice scientists [6]
Harry Brower Sr. 1924-1992 Iñupiat See The Whales, they give themselves, and  Fifty More Year Below Zero:
Tributes and Meditations for the Naval Arctic Laboratory's first half century at Barrow, Alaska
[7][8][9][10][11]
Patricia Longley Cochran Iñupiat [12][13][14]
Stanley Edwin Gwich'in UAF - Atmospheric Sciences, Climatology - PhD [15][16][17]
Sven Haakanson 1967- Alutiiq [18]
Al Hopson, Sr. or Eben Hopson Iñupiat See Fifty More Year Below Zero: Tributes and Meditations for the Naval Arctic
Laboratory's first half century at Barrow, Alaska
Orville Huntington Athabaskan B.S. Wildlife Biology, Climate Change, Indigenous Knowledge, Subsistence, Alaska Native Corporations [19][20]
Paul John 1929-2015 Yup'ik [21][22][23][24]
book review[25]
Teresa Arevgaq John Yup'ik [26][27][28][29]
Oscar Kawagley 1934-2011 Yup'ik traditional knowledge and science educator [30][31][32][33][34]
Della Keats 1907-1996 Iñupiat Healer, midwife
Joe Leavitt 1959- Iñupiat Utqiagvik - extensive experience (40+ years) working as consultant with ice scientists. [35][36]
Ilarion (Larry) Merculieff circa 1950 Aleut [30][37][38][39]
Simon Paneak 1900-1975 Iñupiat See Fifty More Year Below Zero: Tributes and Meditations for the Naval Arctic
Laboratory's first half century at Barrow, Alaska
[4][40][41][42][43]
Peter Sovalik 1910-1977 Iñupiat An Original Arctic Naturalist, by Robert E. Henshaw and Max C. Brewer 2001 [44][45][46][47][48]
Tina Marie Woods Aleut Ph.D. in Clinical-Community Psychology with a Rural Indigenous Emphasis from the University of Alaska Anchorage. Worked within the Alaska Tribal Health System for over 15 years, with much time administering the Aleutian Pribilof Islands Association. [49][50][51]

Native science organizations

See also

References

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  51. Lewis, Jordan; Woods, Tina Marie; Zuniga, Ruth; David, E. J. R. (August 2010). "The Indigenous Peoples of Alaska: Appreciating the Role of Elders in Shifting Toward a Strength-Based and Culturally-Appropriate Approach to Mental Health" (PDF). Communique: 23–27.

Resources

  • Brower, H., & Brewster, K. (2004). The whales, they give themselves: Conversations with Harry Brower, Sr (No. 4). Univ of Alaska Pr.
  • Eben Hopson Memorial Archives: Celebrate the life and leadership of the late Eben Hopson
  • Sea Ice Project Jukebox (This project includes oral history recordings of residents of northern Alaska talking about sea ice conditions, observations over time, and changes that are occurring. The collection includes archival interviews recorded from 1978 to 1980 as part of a study related to potential offshore oil development, and from 2008-2009 as part of a Geophysics Ph.D. project about sea ice thickness along spring whaling trails offshore of Utqiaġvik (Barrow)).
  • Sturm, M. (2002). Fifty More Years below Zero: Tributes and Meditations for the Naval Arctic Research Laboratory's First Half Century.
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