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ALASKA
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Alaska
is located in the extreme northwest portion of North America. It is by far the
largest U.S. state in area, but one of the least populated.
Purchased
from Russia on April 16, 1867, Alaska became the 49th US state on January 3,
1959. The name "Alaska" is most likely derived from the Aleut Alyeska,
meaning "great country", "mainland" or "great
land."
It
is bordered by Yukon Territory and British Columbia, Canada to the east, the
Gulf of Alaska and the Pacific Ocean to the south, the Bering Sea, Bering
Strait, and Chukchi Sea to the west, and the Beaufort Sea and the Arctic Ocean
to the north.
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Bird- Willow Ptarmigan
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Flower -Forget-me-not
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Fish- King Salmon
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Gem- Jade
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Mammal- Moose
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Marine- Mammal Bowhead Whale
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Mineral- Gold
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Motto- "North to the
Future"
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Nickname- "The Last
Frontier"
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Song- "Alaska's
Flag"
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Tree- Sitka Spruce
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(1794)
Russia set up first trading post at Kodiak
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(1867)
Russia sells Alaska to the United States for $7.2 Million
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(1880)
Gold discovered near Juneau
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(1897)
The Klondike gold rush began
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(1912)
Mt. Katmai erupted causing massive devastation
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(1935)
Will Rogers and Wiley Post killed in a plane crash near Barrow
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(1942)
Japanese invade the Aleutian Islands of Attu and Kiska
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(1959)
Alaska becomes 49th U.S. state
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(1964)
Powerful earthquake strikes Anchorage
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(1977)
Trans-Alaska pipeline completed
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(1989)
Exxon Valdez oil spill in Prince William Sound
In
1866 the Russian government offered to sell the territory of Alaska to the
United States. Secretary of State William H. Seward, enthusiastic about the
prospect of American expansion, negotiated the deal for the Americans. Eduard de
Stoekl, Russian Minister to the United States, negotiated for the Russians. On
March 30, 1867, the two parties agrees that the United States would pay Russia
7.2 million dollars for the territory of Alaska. For less than 2 cents an acre,
the United States acquired nearly 600,000 square miles. Opponents of the Alaska
Purchase persisted in calling it "Seward's Folly" or "Seward's
Icebox" until 1896, when the great Klondike Gold Rush convinced even the
harshest critics that Alaska was a valuable addition to the United States. The
purchase of Alaska from Russia cleared the way for the admission of the first
noncontiguous territory to the United States.
Treasury
Warrant in the Amount of $7.2 Million for the Purchase of Alaska
Full
Text of Alaska Purchase Click Here

Secretary
of State William Seward
Russian
Minister to the United States Edouard de Stoeckl
Czar's
Ratification of the Alaska Purchase Treaty
On
August 16, 1896 Yukon-area Indians Skookum Jim Mason and Tagish Charlie, along
with Seattleite George Carmack found gold in Rabbit Creek, near Dawson, in the
Yukon region of Canada. The creek was promptly renamed Bonanza Creek, and many
of the locals started staking claims. Gold was literally found all over the
place, and most of these early stakeholders (who became known as the
"Klondike Kings") became wealthy.
Gold
mining operation showing miners using gold pan and a sluice-A sluice is a long
trough like box set on a slope of about 1:20, through which placer gravel is
carried by a stream of water. The sand and gravel are carried away, while most
of the gold and other heavy minerals are caught in riffles or a blanket on the
floor.
Since the Yukon was so remote,
word of this find spread relatively slowly for almost a year.

On July 17, 1897, eleven months
after the initial discovery of gold, the steamship Portland arrived in Seattle
from Dawson with "more than a ton of gold", according to the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer. With that pronouncement, the Klondike Gold Rush was on!
Within six months, approximately
100,000 gold-seekers set off for the Yukon.
The Gold Rush of the late 19th
century put the state on the map, then followed by the Prudhoe Bay oil and gas
reservoir discovery in 1968, Alaska quickly began its incredible economic
contribution (in the billions) to the U.S. economy.
The
name Alaska is derived from the Aleut word "Alyeska," meaning
"great land." Alaska is the largest state in the Union. It is 1/5th
the size of the entire United States.
It
comprises 586,412 square miles or approximately 365,000,000 acres. Alaska has
6,640 miles of coastline and, including islands, has 33,904 miles of shoreline, 3 million lakes and more than 3,000 rivers. From
it's East to West borders it is over 2,400 miles, and from North to South it is
over 1,420 miles.
It was admitted to the Union as the 49th State on January 3,
1959.Alaska is the last great wilderness in the United States. Civilization has
only encroached on about 160,000 acres of its 365 million acres. This is less
than 1/20th of 1% of the State, the rest is still untouched wilderness.
Anchorage,
with a population of about 260,000, is Alaska's largest city.More than half the
state's population lives within a radius of 50 miles of Anchorage.Fairbanks is
the second largest city, with a population of about 85,000 in the metropolitan
area (30,000 within the city limits), followed by Juneau, the state capital,
with a population of about 30,000.The next largest communities are the regional
centers: Barrow, Bethel, Dillingham, Ketchikan, Kodiak, Kotzebue, Nome,
Unalaska, and Valdez. Homer, Kenai, Seward, Sitka, Skagway, Soldotna and Cordova
also fall into this collection of towns and villages. Ketchikan has a population
of 14,000; the other towns have between 1,000 and 9,000 residents.
MOUNTAINS
Alaska
has 39 mountain ranges and 17 of the 20 highest peaks in North America. Major
mountain chains and mountain ranges are the Alaska Range, which includes Mount
McKinley as well as several volcanic peaks that can be seen across Cook Inlet
from Anchorage; the Brooks Range in northwest Alaska; the Chugach Range around
Anchorage; the St. Elias Mountains including the 18,000-foot Mount St. Elias
(North America's second highest peak, Mount Logan, at 19,545 feet, is located on
the Canadian side of the St. Elias Mountains); and the Fairweather Range, which
stretches down into the southeast panhandle.
WATER
BODIES
The
Yukon River, almost 2,000 miles long, is the third longest river in the U.S.
There are more than 3,000 rivers in Alaska and over 3 million lakes. The
largest, Lake Iliamna, encompasses over 1,000 square miles.
GLACIERS
Alaska
has an estimated 100,000 glaciers, ranging from tiny cirque glaciers to huge
valley glaciers. There are more active glaciers and ice fields in Alaska than in
the rest of the inhabited world. The largest glacier is the Malaspina at 850
square miles. Five percent of the state, or 29,000 square miles, is covered by
glaciers.
COMPASS
POINTS
Alaska
boasts the northernmost (Point Barrow), the easternmost (Pochnoi Point on
Semisopochnoi Island in the Aleutians), and the westernmost (Amatignak Island in
the Aleutians) points in the United States.
VOLCANOES
Alaska
is part of the "Pacific Ring of Fire," a string of volcanoes that
stretches from Asia into North America. It has more than 100 volcanoes and
volcanic fields, many of them in the Aleutian Islands. A 1912 eruption created
the "Valley of 10,000 Smokes" ,which is now part of Katmai National
Park, on the Alaska Peninsula and was the largest 20th century eruption in the
world. Mount Spurr and Mount Redoubt, about 100 miles west of Anchorage, erupted
in the 1990s.
EARTHQUAKES
On
March 27, 1964, North America’s strongest recorded earthquake, with a moment
magnitude of 9.2, rocked central Alaska. Each year Alaska has approximately
5,000 earthquakes, including 1,000 that measure above 3.5 on the Richter scale.
Of the ten strongest earthquakes ever recorded in the world, three have occurred
in Alaska.
credit:
State of Alaska, U.S. Census, University of Washington, U.S. Library of Congress
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