Kobuk Valley National Park Information Page

Welcome to the Kobuk Valley National Park Information Page.
Here you will find all you need to know about the natural history of the park.
Learn about the geology, trees, mammals, birds, or other plants and wildlife of the area.

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Kobuk Valley National Park Information
  • Archeological Resources
  • Environment
  • Establishment
  • Peoples
  • Size and Visitation
  • Wildlife

  • 
    

    Establishment

    Kobuk Valley National Park was proclaimed a national monument 01 Dec 1978, and established as a national park 02 Dec 1980. Kobuk Valley National Park is enclosed by the Baird and Waring mountains. It includes the central section of the Kobuk River, the 25-square-mile (40.3 km) Great Kobuk Sand Dunes, and the Little Kobuk and Hunt River and dunes, which were created by the grinding action of ancient glaciers and carried by wind to the valley.

    Cultural Resources of Kobuk Valley National Park

    Kobuk Valley National Park was created in 1980 under the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA). This act states that Kobuk Valley National Park is to be managed "for the following purposes, among others: To maintain the environmental integrity of the natural features of the Kobuk River Valley, including the Kobuk, Salmon, and other rivers, the boreal forest, and the Great Kobuk Sand Dunes, in an undeveloped state; to protect and interpret, in cooperation with Native Alaskans, archeological sites associated with Native cultures; to protect migration routes for the Arctic caribou herd; to protect habitat for, and populations of, fish and wildlife including but not limited to caribou, moose, black and grizzly bears, wolves, and waterfowl; and to protect the viability of subsistence resources." Archeological and ethnographic resources are specifically discussed in the enabling language for the park and it is very rich in both. Prehistoric resources within the park are extensive and of national and international significance.

    The park is located in Northwest Alaska. It consists of the valley of the Kobuk River, running along the southern edge of the western end of the Brooks Range. Its boundary runs along the ridgetops of a set of mountains (the Baird Mountains to the north and the Waring Mountains to the south) that essentially forms a circle, defining and enclosing the Kobuk Valley. The middle two-thirds of the Kobuk River, from just above Kiana to just below Ambler, is included in the park, as are several major tributaries (Salmon, Hunt and other rivers).


    
    

    Size and Visitation

    Acreage - as of September 23, 2000

    Federal Land - 1,669,813.00
    Non-Federal Land - 80,923.86
    Gross Area Acres - 1,750,736.86

    Kobuk Valley National Park has a gross area of about 1,750,700 acres, of which 1,669,813.00 acres is in federal ownership. Within the park there are 182,767 acres of designated Wilderness lands. About 81,000 acres of non-federal lands lie within the park. The state of Alaska claims about 9,500 acres (mostly submerged lands), with the rest divided among several Native Alaskan interests, including NANA Regional Corporation, Ambler Village Corporation and Kiana Corporation. These include 61 Native allotments, and 94 acres of cemetery and historical sites.

    Visitation> - 1999

    Total Recreation Visits - 6,309

    Kobuk Valley National Park is open year round. The majority of park visitors come in August.


    
    

    Environment

    The Kobuk River begins in the central Brooks Range. The river's mid-section, as it passes through the Kobuk Valley, is wide, slow-moving and clear, and its banks and bottom are sandy. Rushing clearwater tributaries to the Kobuk have their headwaters in the Baird Mountains. These are the Akillik, Hunt, Kaliguricheark, Tutuksuk, Salmon, and Kallarichuk rivers. Only slow moving creeks enter the Kobuk from the south.

    Trees approach their northern limit in the Kobuk Valley, where boreal forest and arctic tundra meet. Large expanses of tundra cover the valley in some locations, while forests cover the better-drained portions. In some places sparse stands of spruce, birch, and poplar grow above a thick ground cover of lichens (reindeer moss). Sand created by the grinding action of glaciers (mostly during the Pleistocene) has been carried to the valley by wind and water. Large sand dunes lie on the south side of the Kobuk River. These are the Great Kobuk Sand Dunes, the Little Kobuk Sand Dunes, and the Hunt River Sand Dunes. Older, vegetated dunes cover much of the southern portion of the valley.

    Three general landscape types exist within Kobuk Valley National Park: the Baird Mountains, the Waring Mountains, and the Kobuk Valley (flood plains and terraces). The Baird Mountains, north and east of the river, are the western extension of the Brooks Range and separate the Kobuk and Noatak rivers. They range in height from 2500 to 4760 feet. On the south side of the Kobuk River lie the Waring Mountains, which are broadly folded, northeast-trending mountains that are generally less than 2000 feet high. The Kobuk River runs through the lowland between these two sets of mountains. This area is largely covered by glacial drift and alluvial deposits, including clayey till, outwash gravel, sand, and silt.

    Although there are currently no glaciers within the park, at least five major Pleistocene glaciations have left effects in the area. Especially noteworthy are the large dune fields that were the result of the strong easterly winds that moved glacio-fluvial deposits of sand and silt during interglacial periods. These dune fields cover approximately 200,000 acres, mostly vegetated by tundra and forest. There are presently three active dune fields: the Great Kobuk Sand Dunes lie less than two miles south of the Kobuk River and immediately east of Kavet Creek (a major archeological site, Ahteut, is located there also); the Little Kobuk Sand Dunes lie about five miles south of the river in the southeastern part of the park; and the Hunt River Sand Dunes are located on the south bank of the Kobuk River across from the mouth of the Hunt River.

    The Kobuk River is one of the major rivers of northwestern Alaska. It drains an area of 11,980 square miles and is about 350 miles long. Its course is characterized by meanders, oxbow bends, and sloughs. The flood plain varies from one to eight miles wide with most flooding occurring during spring breakup, usually due to ice jams. There are six major tributaries of the Kobuk.

    All have their headwaters in the Baird Mountains and all are entirely undeveloped. One of them, the Salmon, has been designated a Wild and Scenic River in that national system. There are numerous small lakes and ponds scattered throughout the park, some due to the permafrost and some due to detached meanders or oxbows of the rivers.

    The Kobuk Valley is partially forested and is typical of the broad transition zone between forest and tundra. The vegetation of this park is of particular scientific interest because of tree line phenomena, the relationship of vegetation to the sand dunes, the proximity to the eastern end of the Bering land Bridge, and the relationship of vegetation to human use of the Kobuk Valley for thousands of years. Forests occur on the better-drained areas along stream courses and on higher ground.

    There is an alternating tundra and forest pattern that forms a mosaic across the valley. Spruce and balsam poplar grow in the lower and middle reaches of the river valleys that extend into the Baird and Waring mountains. Willow and alder thickets and isolated cottonwood grow up to the headwaters of the rivers and streams. Alpine tundra covers the higher slopes and ridges. Tussock tundra and low, heath-type vegetation covers most of the flat floor of the valley. Of note is that lightning and human-caused fires have greatly affected the vegetation processes over much of the Kobuk Valley as willow, alder and fireweed have invaded or become dominant in many burned areas.

    The fish and wildlife of Kobuk Valley National Park are typical arctic and subarctic fauna. The major economic species are caribou, moose, salmon, sheefish, and other fish species. Caribou of the Western Arctic Caribou herd range over the entire region. The 1986 herd size was approximately 225,000. The herd migrates through the park twice a year - southward in August from their summer range north of the Brooks Range and the DeLong Mountains and northward from their winter range in the Selawik Hills-Buckland River area in March. Onion Portage, in Kobuk Valley National Park, is a major crossing point of the herd, and has served as a hunting stand for at least 10,000 years.


    
    

    Wildlife

    Kobuk valley provides important fall and winter range for the western arctic caribou herd. Bands of bulls and cows may be seen here from late August through October as they migrate across the Kobuk River on their extensive annual migrations. Caribou migrations are one of the wonders of the subarctic and arctic realms. Traditionally, caribou have been among this region's chief food sources for human, predators, and scavengers. The populations of some other animals species may even fluctuate with that of the caribou. Native peoples have depended on caribou for food, clothing, shelter, and tools, using the entire animal.

    Caribou used for:

    Food: meat, greens from the stomach, and fat.
    Clothing: hides for coats called parkies, trousers, boots called mukluks, and mittens, plus sinew to sew them.
    Shelter: hides for tents.
    Tools: antler and bone for needles, sleigh brakes, fish spears, knife handles, arrowheads, hide scrapers, and snow shovels.

    Range and migration

    Known as "nomads of the north," caribou have lived in most of Alaska except its southeastern panhandle. In their yearly wandering, caribou of the western arctic herd range over 140,000 square miles, including the entire three parks that make up the Northwest Alaska Areas. The herd - North America's largest - is more than 300,000 at this writing.

    Spring migration begins in March; the herd's main body crosses the Kobuk and Noatak rivers moving northward to calving grounds on the Arctic Coastal Plain. Many of the caribou begin to cross the Noatak southward in late August and the Kobuk in September. The winter range lies south of Kobuk Valley National Park and the Selawik National Wildlife Refuge.

    Caribou move about the tundra in constant search of plant foods to support their body weight: 150 to 300 pounds for bulls. Tundra is a mat of mostly prostrate vegetation that can grow where short summers and other conditions preclude tree growth. Wet, moist, and alpine tundra is often underlain by permanently frozen ground called permafrost. The ground surfaces of wet tundra and moist tundra thaw in the summer and stay water logged because permafrost prevents ready drainage. Alpine tundra often grows on rocky ground that drains very rapidly: the ground thaws in summer but plants must resist drying out. Caribou feed on grasses and grass-like sedges; small shrubs and their berries; and twigs and bark. In winter, when these are not available, they eat significant amounts of a lichen called raindeer moss. Caribou can dig through snow to find food unless the crust is too hard, in which case they may suffer malnutrition and even starve. Besides the predators, chief antagonists of caribou in the summer are the caribou warble fly, caribou nostril fly, black fly and mosquito. Caribou may even stop eating while trying to avoid the Arctic's horde of biting insects. Mosquitoes, however are an important food source - converting the productivity of plants into protein - that sustain abundant bird and fish life of the north.

    The principal predator of the caribou are the wolf and bear. Wolverines, foxes and eagles prey on calves. Any of the above, as well as weasels, lemmings, some hawks, ravens, Canada jay, and gulls will scavenge caribou carcasses. Some wolves, especially on the North Slope calving areas, will follow the caribou herd. However many wolves reside in specific locations. Wolves hunt caribou by stealth and ambush, by relay running, or by culling victims of falls from running in a tightly massed herd. Healthy adult caribou can normally outrun single wolves and have the advantage on ice. Wolves have the advantage on soft tundra and in some snow conditions.

    Caribou have adapted to this harsh and demanding environment in many ways. Hollow caribou hair traps substantial air for excellent insulation against the cold. Its buoyancy is evident when the animals cross the rivers; they float very high. The caribou's dew claws and spreading, cleft hooves, help support its weight on soft ground and snow. In the winter the hoof's sharp edges help the caribou on frozen terrain. Adult bulls can accumulate fat deposits - mostly on the back and rump - that weigh 60 pounds or more in early fall. They lose the fat during the rutting, or mating season.

    Moose were scarce in the region 50 years ago but the population has steadily increased in recent years and now numbers several thousand. There is some indication that moose populations have been high in the past and have fluctuated along with climatic shifts.

    Dall sheep are present in the higher elevations of the Brooks Range. Bears, both grizzly and black, are found throughout the region, as are wolves, coyotes, and foxes. Other fur bearers are also locally and seasonally abundant. Birds are seasonally abundant, especially waterfowl which use the area for summer breeding. So far, 83 species of birds have been identified within Kobuk Valley National Park.

    Twenty-five species of fish are found within the Kobuk River drainage. Although all five species of Pacific salmon occur in the waters of the region, only chum, king, and pink salmon occur within the park. Chum salmon is the most abundant and supports commercial and subsistence harvests. The Salmon and Tutuksuk rivers are major spawning and production tributaries of the Kobuk River for chum salmon. Within the Kobuk River in the park, sheefish, or inconnu, are found and harvested. Arctic char and arctic grayling are more widely distributed throughout the park. Other species, such as northern pike, whitefish, burbot, sculpins, and least ciscos inhabit rivers and lakes in the region and park.


    
    

    Archeological Resources

    The Onion Portage site, on the Kobuk River in the eastern side of the park, is one of the most important archeological sites in arctic America. It has more than 70 distinct stratified cultural layers that document a progression of human camps spanning about 12,500 years. Onion Portage is still in use as a major caribou hunting site as it has been for over 100 centuries. Large portions of the site remain un-excavated. Onion Portage has been designated a National Historic Landmark and placed, as a district, on the National Register of Historic Places. It is not, however, owned by the park, but remains an in-holding of the NANA Regional Corporation.

    The Kobuk valley has been lived in and used for at least 12,500 years. People of all the major cultural groups that have lived in northwest Alaska have left evidence of their presence at numerous sites in the park. The known sites are concentrated along the Kobuk river and its tributaries. Detailed archeological investigations in five sites in the park were made by J.L. Giddings in the 1940's, including Ahteut, Ekseavik, and Ambler Island. He also did dendrochronological research there. Extensive excavations, begun by Giddings and completed by Anderson, were done in the 1960's at Onion Portage. Since the termination of work at Onion Portage, very little archeological work has been done in Kobuk Valley National Park. Hickey excavated several sites within and near the park. Stanford and Dixon conducted a reconnaissance survey of portions of the Great Sand Dunes and located several sites, some of which may be very early.

    Apparently, only the highlights of the park's prehistory have been revealed. This is because most of the known archeological sites in KAVA are winter settlements which were concentrated along the rivers. Other aspects of the lifeways of the prehistoric inhabitants of the valley, especially those activities that took place away from the Kobuk River, are still basically unknown and remain to be investigated. Enough is known of the cultural chronology of the park (based mainly on the findings from Onion Portage), however, to outline the sequence.

    The earliest inhabitants of the valley lived in a treeless environment around 12000 years ago. These people of the Paleoarctic cultural tradition are represented by the Akmak and Kobuk levels at Onion Portage and seem to have been mostly hunters of caribou. Evidence of the Paleoarctic culture ended at Onion Portage about 8000 years BP.

    After a gap of almost 2,000 years, during which no people appear to have occupied the Onion Portage area, a different cultural group, the Northern Archaic tradition or the Palisades and Portage cultures occupied the Onion Portage area. Their traditions were derived from the spruce-forest or boreal forest regions to the south and east, and they could well have been Indian from the interior regions. Their camps show some evidence of fishing as a major subsistence activity. The diagnostic artifact of this tradition is the side-notched projectile point. It is sometimes found with the microblades and cores that are the hallmark of the Paleoarctic and the Arctic Small Tool traditions. However, this was not the case at Onion Portage (Anderson 1968), leaving the theoretical and chronological issues that are inherent in this contradiction to be further investigated (Schoenberg 1995).

    About 4,000 years ago, arctic-oriented peoples of the Arctic Small-Tool tradition again moved into the Kobuk Valley. They had developed lifeways that enabled this culture to spread over most of the Arctic, from Norton Sound to Greenland. While coastally oriented, regional and local specializations were also present. The people in the Kobuk Valley undoubtedly used local resources such as caribou and fish. They also maintained strong ties to the coast and its marine resources. They probably made seasonal journeys down river to the coast for trading and marine mammal hunting . From about 1,500 to 2,000 years ago, this coastal orientation becomes even more evident in the archeological record as the Norton tradition becomes identifiable.

    From about 1,000 to 1,500 years ago (AD 500 to 1000), the middle and upper portions of the Kobuk River were generally unoccupied, perhaps because of a decline in the caribou population (Anderson 1977). During this interval, native peoples of Indian descent (possibly Koyukon) used Onion Portage intermittently for caribou hunting.

    By about 800 years ago (AD 1200), arctic-oriented people once again occupied the valley. About 25 miles down river from Onion Portage, Ahteut, a major archeological site with an extensive series of house-pits, provides the definitive data and description for the Arctic Woodland culture (Giddings 1952). This culture appears to have been unique to the Kobuk River region and shows the adaptation of coastal Eskimos to the forested and rivering environments of the Kobuk Valley. By AD 1400 the Arctic Woodland culture had developed a wide range of fishing techniques and had begun to practice a seasonal round that was basically the same as that seen in late prehistoric times. Settlements appeared in the middle reaches of the valley. The earliest of the sites was located where both winter caribou hunting and summer salmon fishing were possible. Sites such as Ahteut, Onion Portage, and the confluences of the Salmon River, the Hunt River and the Ambler River all had winter houses located on or near sand bars along river bends where seining for salmon was productive. The site at Ambler Island, dated at AD 1750, shows the long continuity of the lifestyle of the Arctic Woodland Culture.

    The middle Kobuk Valley seems to have remained fairly stable during the early 19th century. Sometime after 1850, the caribou population declined (as happened periodically) and subsistence efforts shifted more to the seacoast. By then, the influences of western civilization were being strongly felt. Actual exploration of the Kobuk River by Euroamericans, however, had been preceded by at least 150 years of trade and contacts along the coasts of northwest Alaska. Russian trade goods reached people of the Kobuk region through extensive trade ties across the Bering Strait (as had existed for centuries) between the Native peoples of eastern Siberia and western Alaska.


    
    

    Peoples

    In the 19th century, two Inupiat societies, the Akunirmiut and the Kuuvaum Kangianirmiut, occupied the area now included in the park. Descendants of these people, referred to collectively as "Kuuvangmiit" still use the park and now live in the villages of Kiana, Ambler, Kobuk and Shungnak. The first U.S. Census of the region was conducted in 1900. At that time, the second largest village encountered along the Kobuk River was at the mouth of the Hunt River (now within the park). This village was near Camp Penelope. Grinnel, one of the Kobuk stampeders living at Camp Penelope, provides some accounts of the first substantial contact with Euroamericans. Coordinated ethnographic, historical, and archaeological study of the village and Camp Penelope can open exciting and unique interpretive, historical and methodological vistas.

    The site of Stonewall Jackson's (Oolyak) cabin and camp, at the Kallarichuk ranger station, is being eroded by the Kobuk River. Oolyak, interviewed by Giddings, was one of the last Kobuk Inupiat to reach adulthood prior to sustained Euroamerican contact. Archaeological investigation of the site and interviews with his descendants could provide a powerful illustration of Inupiat acculturation.

    This information was provided by the National Park Service


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