Clark James Mishler Photography

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Inupiat boat builders attach wood ribs of an Iñupiaq skin whaling boat by Leonard Apangalook Sr., Gambell, Alaska. This boat was built during the Ttraditional Native Boat Project at the Alaska Native Heritage Center, Anchorage

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Clark James Mishler
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720x482 / 265.2KB
Keywords
Alaska, Alaska Bush Living, Alaskan, Alaskan Native, Art, Artistry, Bering Sea, Boat, Boat Transportation, Boats, Bonding, Build, Construct, Create, Culture, Determination, Eskimo, Frame, Gambell, Generations, Handcrafted, Handmade, Hard Work, Horizontal, Inupiaq, Iñupiaq, Iñupiat, Kawerak Regional Native (Non-Profit) Corporation, Leonard Apangalook, Lifestyle, Living Off The Land, Looking Away From Camera, Native American, Native culture, Northwest, Oomiak, Outdoor, Outside, Ribs, Rural, Sivuqaq, Skin Boat, Skin boat, Smithsonian Arctic Studies Exhibit, St. Lawrence Island, Subsistence, Subsistence Lifestyle, Subsistence Living, Togetherness, Tradition, Traditional, Traditional Ways, Transport, Transportation, Travel, U.S., USA, Umiak, Umiaq, Umiat, Whaling Boat, Wood, Work, Yup'ik, Yupik, oomiak
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Inupiat boat builders attach wood ribs of an Iñupiaq skin whaling boat by Leonard Apangalook Sr., Gambell, Alaska.  This boat was built during the Ttraditional Native Boat Project at the Alaska Native Heritage Center, Anchorage