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Point Barrow
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==History== [[File:Ukpeagvik mounds.jpg|250px|Ukpeagvik mounds|right]] [[File:Alaska - Point Barrow - NARA - 23942255.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Point Barrow in the 1940s]] Archaeological evidence indicates that Point Barrow was occupied by the ancestors of the [[Iñupiat people|Iñupiat]] for almost 1,000 years prior to the arrival of the first Europeans. Occupation continued into the 1940s. The headland is an important archaeological site, yielding burials and artifacts associated with the [[Thule people|Thule culture]], including [[ulu]]it and [[Bolas|bola]]. The waters off Point Barrow are on the [[bowhead whale]] migration route and it is surmised, that the site was chosen to make hunting easier.<ref name="BBC_2007">{{cite news|first=Richard|last=Black|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6902858.stm|title=Bodies point to Alaska's past|work=BBC|date=December 31, 2007|access-date=November 11, 2017}}</ref> There are also [[Tumulus|burial mounds]] in the area, at the nearby [[Birnirk site]], associated with the earlier [[Birnirk culture]], a pre-Thule culture first identified in 1912 by [[Vilhjalmur Stefansson]] while excavating in the area.<ref name="Birnick">{{cite book|year=1998|pages=[https://archive.org/details/archaeologyofpre0000unse/page/941 941]|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_0u2y_SVnmoC&q=Birnirk+culture+Point+Barrow&pg=PA72|title=Archaeology of Prehistoric Native America: an Encyclopedia|editor-first1=Guy E.|editor-last1=Gibbons|editor-first2=Kenneth M.|editor-last2=Ames|publisher=Taylor & Francis|chapter=Birnick culture|first=Douglas D.|last=Anderson|isbn=9780815307259|url=https://archive.org/details/archaeologyofpre0000unse/page/941}}</ref>{{rp|72}} The settlement was called [[Nuvuk site|Nuvuk]], and it was near the "migration path of bowhead whales which would become the cultural and nutritional centre of Nuvuk life."<ref name="BBC_2007"/> Point Barrow was named in 1826 by English explorer [[Frederick William Beechey]] for [[Sir John Barrow, 1st Baronet|Sir John Barrow]], a statesman and geographer of the [[British Admiralty]].{{cn|date=March 2025|reason=[[Utqiagvik#Name]] says 1825}} The water around it is normally{{when|date=February 2023}} ice-free for two or three months a year, but this was not the experience of the early explorers. Beechey could not reach it by ship and had to send a ship's boat ahead. In 1826, [[John Franklin]] tried to reach it from the east, but was blocked by ice. In 1837, [[Thomas Simpson (explorer)|Thomas Simpson]] walked 50 miles west to Point Barrow after his boats were stopped by ice. In 1849, [[William Pullen]] rounded it in two whale boats after sending two larger boats back west because of the ice. Point Barrow has been a jumping-off point for many [[List of Arctic expeditions|Arctic expeditions]], including the 1926 Wilkins [[Detroit Arctic Expedition]] and the April 15, 1928, [[Carl Ben Eielson|Eielson]]–[[George Hubert Wilkins|Wilkins]] flight across the Arctic Ocean to [[Spitsbergen]]. [[File:Wilkins arctic expedition 1926.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Wilkins-Detroit Arctic Expedition]] On August 15, 1935, an airplane crash killed aviator [[Wiley Post]] and his passenger, the entertainer [[Will Rogers]], at the [[Rogers–Post Site]], 33 km (20.5 mi) southwest of Point Barrow. In 1946, [[William C. Trimble]] of the State Department discussed an alternate offer of land in Point Barrow, as part of a $100 million in gold bullion offer to [[Denmark]] to [[Proposals for the United States to purchase Greenland#1946 proposal|purchase Greenland]].<ref>{{cite book |title=Cold War Science and the Transatlantic Circulation of Knowledge |series=History of Modern Science |editor1-first=Jeroen |editor1-last=van Dongen |publisher=Brill |year=2015 |isbn=978-90-04-26422-9 |chapter=Small State versus Superpower |author1-first=Matthias |author1-last=Heymann |author2-first=Henry |author2-last=Nielsen |author3-first=Kristen Hvidtfelt |author3-last=Nielsen |author4-first=Henrik |author4-last=Knudsen | p=251}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Oakley |first1=Don |title=Historian Claims U.S. Tried to Buy Greenland |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/15307813/ |access-date=August 16, 2019 |work=[[Hattiesburg American]] | agency=[[Associated Press]] | date=August 31, 1977 |via=[[newspapers.com]]}}{{subscription required}}</ref> Had the Alaska trade occurred, from 1967 Denmark would have benefited from [[Prudhoe Bay Oil Field]], the richest petroleum discovery in American history.<ref name="ap">{{cite news |last1=Nelson |first1=W. Dale |title=Wanna Buy Greenland? The United States Once Did |url=https://www.apnews.com/9d4a8021c3650800fdf6dd5903f68972 |access-date=August 16, 2019 |work=[[Associated Press]] | date=May 2, 1991}}</ref> In 1988, [[gray whale]]s were trapped in the ice at Point Barrow, which attracted attention from the public worldwide. The Iñupiat do not hunt gray whales and joined in rescue operation ''[[Operation Breakthrough]]'', which also involved Soviet icebreakers.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE4DF153DF93BA25753C1A96E948260|title=Unlikely Allies Rush to Free 3 Whales|date=1988-10-18|work=New York Times|access-date=2008-06-12|first=Richard|last=Mauer}}</ref> {{clear}} {{wide image|Barrow point panorama.jpg|1600px|alt=center|Nuvuk (Point Barrow)}}
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