Template:Short description Template:About

Template:Infobox islands

Afognak (Alutiiq: Agw’aneq;<ref>UAF: Alaska Native Place Names</ref> Template:Langx<ref>Карта Ледовитого моря и Восточного океана (1844)</ref>) is an island in the Kodiak Archipelago Template:Convert north of Kodiak Island in the U.S. state of Alaska. It is Template:Convert long from east to west and Template:Convert wide from north to south and has a land area of Template:Convert, making it the 18th largest island in the United States. The coast is split by many long, narrow bays. The highest point is Template:Convert.

The dense spruce forests of Afognak are home to Kodiak bears, Roosevelt elk, and Sitka black-tailed deer. Many people visit the island recreationally for hunting and fishing.

HistoryEdit

File:Afognak coastline.jpg
Afognak coastline at Kazakof Bay

The United States Census of 1890 noted a series of settlements along the beachline near the Alutiiq village of Ag’waneq (also called Afognak), including Rutkovsky village, inhabited by a group of retired employees of the Russian-American Company.

Ag’waneq was abandoned after the 1964 Good Friday earthquake devastated the island. The descendants of the Alaska Native inhabitants of the island are officially recognized as the Native Village of Afognak. Most of them now live in Port Lions or Kodiak.

In the early 21st century, there are a few small logging camps and fishing lodges on the island. A community of Russian Old Believers live at Aleneva. The economy is based on subsistence and logging. Transportation is provided by float plane from Kodiak to various areas around the island. The 2000 census reported a population of 169 persons.

File:Afognak Island and fog at midnight in July, Alaska 2009 206.jpg
Fog moving in on Afognak Island at midnight in July 2009.

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

Template:Kodiak Island Borough, Alaska Template:Authority control

Template:Coord