Explore all Knowledge Sharing Products

Deg Hit’an Dingan’ Atlas

ELOKA Product Types
ATLASES & MAPS
Topics
Environmental features & use
Place names
Geographic Area
United States (Alaska)
Status
Not Released to Public
The goal of this project is to work collectively to reconstruct Deg Xinag place names using online mapping and media tools that combine maps, audio recordings, video, photos, and stories.

Gwich'in Place Names Atlas

gwichin atlas area
ELOKA Product Types
ATLASES & MAPS
ENVIRONMENTAL KNOWLEDGE
Topics
Environmental features & use
Place names
Settlements
Geographic Area
Canada (Yukon Territory)
United States (Alaska)
Time Period
Pre-history to present
Status
Not Released to Public

Gwich’in Nąįį Googindì’ K’ìt / Gwich’in Place Names Atlas is a project that has developed an interactive, online Atlas of Gwich’in place names and stories. Working with Gwich’in communities and partners, ELOKA is developing the atlas so that knowledge of the land passed from generation to generation can be preserved and shared. 

Topics: Traditional place names, including environmental features and settlements

Geographic areas: Yukon Territory, Alaska, and surrounding area.

The Bering Sea Sub Network Phase 2

Topics
Community-based monitoring
Indigenous knowledge
Wildlife management & animal husbandry
Wildlife observations
Geographic Area
Russian Federation
United States (Alaska)
Status
Not Released to Public
A systematic collection of local observations of physical, biological, and socioeconomic conditions in the Bering Sea that provides data sovereignty to the fishers and hunters of the region.

Voices from the Bay Data Preservation

ELOKA Product Types
ENVIRONMENTAL KNOWLEDGE
ORAL HISTORIES
Topics
Community-based monitoring
Indigenous knowledge
Wildlife observations
Geographic Area
Canada (Nunavut Territory)
Time Period
1999 - 2018
Status
Not Released to Public
A project to organize, document, and preserve source data and materials from a 1997 publication, Voices from the Bay: Traditional Ecological Knowledge of Inuit and Cree in the Hudson Bay Bioregion, into a digital repository for the Sanikiluaq community.
The ELOKA Program is generously supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation through awards OPP-1554271, OPP-1549912, and OPP-1546038