Research and Collections
Archaeology
Documentary Film
The Alaska Center for Documentary Film has been documenting the changing cultures and issues of Northern peoples since the early 1970s. The collection now contains more than 400 hours of historic and irreplaceable visual and audio material. Award-winning films and videos produced by the Film Center detail the relationship of Alaska Native and other Northern peoples to the land, sea and natural environment, as well as to their rapidly changing social, educational and political environments.
Earth Science
The Earth Sciences collection contains over 60,000 specimens in two sub-collections: paleontology and geology. The paleontology collection includes Quaternary mammals, fossil invertebrates, plants and microfossil samples as well as the world’s largest collection of polar dinosaurs. The geology collection includes minerals and gems from Alaska and the Pacific Rim, ore samples from Alaska and arctic Canada, and meteorites.
Entomology
The museum’s newest collection contains more than 223,000 specimens from Alaska and other regions, incuding Canada, eastern Russia and the contiguous United States. There are an estimated 8,000 species of insects in Alaska, many of them poorly documented, so the museum’s collection serves as a valuable resource for insect-related work in Alaska.
Ethnology & History
The ethnology collection contains more than 12,000 objects made and used by Alaska Natives from the mid-1800s to the present, including exceptional examples of basketry, beadwork, ivory carvings, masks, dolls, clothing, tools used in subsistence activities and items made as souvenirs. The history collection contains more than 2,600 objects of Western manufacture representing Alaska’s history from the Nome gold rush through the present, including goods, folk art, tools, firearms, Russian-American material, aviation equipment and other memorabilia.
Fine Arts
The fine arts collection includes more than 3,700 works of art and represents an invaluable record of Alaska’s cultural richness and aesthetic diversity. The collection focuses on Alaskan art – historic through contemporary – and is composed of all major mediums of visual expression. The collection serves as an important tool for scholarly research in the art history of Alaska and for classroom support in the study of drawing, painting, photography, printmaking and sculpture.
Herbarium
The herbarium maintains a permanent physical record of Alaska’s flora with its systematic collection of pressed dried plants – more than 223,000 vascular and non-vascular specimens from Alaska and the Circumpolar North. Specimens are labeled with information about their locality, date, habitat and collector. Now the largest single collection of Alaskan plants, the herbarium attracts researchers worldwide who study the northern flora.
Ichthyology and Aquatics
A fish collection of about 5,000 lots has been housed at the Museum since the 1970s. James Morrow, Ron Smith, and several other University of Alaska researchers established and built the nucleus of the collection. The collection contains both fresh and saltwater fish specimens and is a source of data for marine ecologists and resource managers.
Mammals
The mammal collection is the 10th largest in North America, with more than 100,000 specimens primarily from Alaska and adjacent regions of Canada and Russia. Most specimens include skulls, study skins, postcranial skeletons and frozen tissues. There are world-class holdings of several marine mammal species, including ribbon seals, spotted seals, walruses and sea otters, as well as strong holdings from Southeast Alaska’s Alexander Archipelago. Tissue samples from more than 70,000 specimens are archived in Genetic Resources.
Ornithology
The bird collection has the world’s largest collection of Alaska birds and includes the longest modern series for many species of birds from northwestern North America and eastern Asia. It has become the definitive collection for genetic studies of birds from this region. Preserved as skins, skeletons and tissue samples, approximately 24,000 specimens in the bird collection represent almost all bird species and subspecies known in Alaska, including species from six continents that breed in Alaska.