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Wrangell-St. Elias National Park & PreserveMount St. Elias and Icy Bay
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Wrangell-St. Elias National Park & Preserve
History & Culture
Miners on Bonanza Creek
Prospectors camp along Bonanza Creek
 

The Cultural Resources program at Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve documents people in the parks, now and in the past, and helps preserve places with special history.

What are cultural resources?
Although Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve is remote and sparsely populated, it has been inhabited for thousands of years. Cultural resources professionals help share the stories of people who called the Wrangell Mountains home, then and now.

In Alaska, as in the rest of the United States, the National Park Service recognizes and manages five basic types of cultural resources:

  • Archeological Sites: Physical evidence of past human occupation or activity (the National Park Service recognizes two basic subcategories; prehistoric and historic archeological sites).
  • Cultural landscapes: Geographic areas associated with a historic event, activity, or person; or that exhibit other cultural or aesthetic values (this category includes designed, vernacular, and ethnographic landscapes). Cultural landscapes encompass both cultural and natural resources as well as any wildlife or domestic animals that have historic associations with the landscapes.
  • Ethnographic Resources: Sites, structures, objects, landscapes, or natural features of traditional importance to a contemporary cultural group.
  • Museum Objects: Material things that possess scientific, historical, cultural or aesthetic values (usually movable by nature or design).
  • Structures: Constructed works created to serve some human activity (usually immovable by nature or design – buildings, bridges, earthworks, roads, rock cairns, etc. – prehistoric or historic).

Why save the physical legacy of the past?
But why preserve the physical remains of the past; is it not sufficient to capture the stories in books? The authentic remnants of our nation’s cultural legacy give us an irreplaceable tangible link to our past that cannot be replaced by a book or an article. These authentic places and objects are material touchstones to a past that we experience for ourselves. They serve as material anchors to our past and reference points to our future that cannot be easily erased or eliminated. We can see them, touch them, connect with them in such a way that we can know the past actually happened. Each generation can learn from the ruins, the buildings, and the objects of the past; these are the landmarks that link us over time and space and give meaning and orientation to our lives.

Pumping oil!  

Did You Know?
The Alaska Pipeline, built during the 1970’s, stretches 802 miles from the oilfields of Prudhoe Bay to the tanker loading facility at Valdez.

Last Updated: September 14, 2006 at 08:47 EST