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Wikipedia

Alaska

Alaska (/əˈlæskə/ (listen) ə-LAS-kə) is a U.S. state on the northwest extremity of North America. A semi-exclave of the U.S., it borders British Columbia and the Yukon in Canada to the east, and shares a western maritime border in the Bering Strait with the Russian Federation's Chukotka Autonomous Okrug. To the north are the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas of the Arctic Ocean, and the Pacific Ocean lies to the south and southwest.

Alaska
Alax̂sxax̂ (Aleut)
Alaaskaq (Inupiaq)
Alaskaq (Central Yupik)
Anáaski (Tlingit)
Alas'kaaq (Alutiiq)
Аляска (Russian)
State of Alaska
Nickname
The Last Frontier
Motto
North to the Future
Anthem: Alaska's Flag
Map of the United States with Alaska highlighted
CountryUnited States
Before statehoodTerritory of Alaska
Admitted to the UnionJanuary 3, 1959; 64 years ago (1959-01-03) (49th)
CapitalJuneau
Largest cityAnchorage
Largest metro and urban areasAnchorage
Government
 • GovernorMike Dunleavy (R)
 • Lieutenant GovernorNancy Dahlstrom (R)
LegislatureAlaska Legislature
 • Upper houseSenate
 • Lower houseHouse of Representatives
JudiciaryAlaska Supreme Court
U.S. senators
U.S. House delegationMary Peltola (D) (list)
Area
 • Total663,268 sq mi (1,717,856 km2)
 • Land571,951 sq mi (1,481,346 km2)
 • Water91,316 sq mi (236,507 km2)  13.77%
 • Rank1st
Dimensions
 • Length1,420 mi (2,285 km)
 • Width2,261 mi (3,639 km)
Elevation
1,900 ft (580 m)
Highest elevation20,310 ft (6,190.5 m)
Lowest elevation
0 ft (0 m)
Population
 (2020[3])
 • Total736,081
 • Rank48th
 • Density1.26/sq mi (0.49/km2)
  • Rank50th
 • Median household income
$77,800[2]
 • Income rank
12th
DemonymAlaskan
Language
 • Official languagesAhtna, Alutiiq, Dena'ina, Deg Xinag, English, Eyak, Gwich'in, Haida, Hän, Holikachuk, Inupiaq, Koyukon, Lower Tanana, St. Lawrence Island Yupik, Tanacross, Tlingit, Tsimshian, Unangax̂, Upper Kuskokwim, Upper Tanana, Yup'ik
 • Spoken language
Time zones
east of 169°30'UTC−09:00 (Alaska)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−08:00 (ADT)
west of 169°30'UTC−10:00 (Hawaii-Aleutian)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−09:00 (HADT)
USPS abbreviation
AK
ISO 3166 codeUS-AK
Latitude51°20'N to 71°50'N
Longitude130°W to 172°E
Websitealaska.gov
Interactive map showing border of Alaska (click to zoom)

Alaska is the largest U.S. state by area, comprising more total area than the next three largest states of Texas, California, and Montana combined, and is the seventh-largest subnational division in the world. It is the third-least populous and most sparsely populated U.S. state, and the continent's most populous territory located mostly north of the 60th parallel, with a population of 736,081 as of 2020—more than quadruple the combined populations of Northern Canada and Greenland.[3] The state capital of Juneau is the second-largest city in the United States by area, and the former capital of Alaska, Sitka, is the largest U.S. city by area. Approximately half of Alaska's residents live within the Anchorage metropolitan area.

Indigenous people have lived in Alaska for thousands of years, and it is widely believed that the region served as the entry point for the initial settlement of North America by way of the Bering land bridge. The Russian Empire was the first to actively colonize the area beginning in the 18th century, eventually establishing Russian America, which spanned most of the current state. The expense and logistical difficulty of maintaining this distant possession prompted its sale to the U.S. in 1867 for US$7.2 million (equivalent to $140 million in 2021). The area went through several administrative changes before becoming organized as a territory on May 11, 1912. It was admitted as the 49th state of the U.S. on January 3, 1959.[4]

Abundant natural resources have enabled Alaska—with one of the smallest state economies—to have one of the highest per capita incomes, with commercial fishing, and the extraction of natural gas and oil, dominating Alaska's economy. U.S. Armed Forces bases and tourism also contribute to the economy; more than half the state is federally-owned land containing national forests, national parks, and wildlife refuges.

The Indigenous population of Alaska is proportionally the highest of any U.S. state, at over 15 percent.[5] Various Indigenous languages are spoken, and Alaskan Natives are influencial in local and state politics.

Etymology

The name "Alaska" (Russian: Аля́ска, tr. Alyáska) was introduced in the Russian colonial period when it was used to refer to the Alaska Peninsula. It was derived from an Aleut-language idiom, alaxsxaq, meaning "the mainland" or, more literally, "the object towards which the action of the sea is directed".[6][7][8] It is also known as Alyeska, the "great land", an Aleut word that was derived from the same root.

History

Pre-colonization

 
A modern Alutiiq dancer in traditional festival garb

Numerous indigenous peoples occupied Alaska for thousands of years before the arrival of European peoples to the area. Linguistic and DNA studies done here have provided evidence for the settlement of North America by way of the Bering land bridge.[9] At the Upward Sun River site in the Tanana Valley in Alaska, remains of a six-week-old infant were found. The baby's DNA showed that she belonged to a population that was genetically separate from other native groups present elsewhere in the New World at the end of the Pleistocene. Ben Potter, the University of Alaska Fairbanks archaeologist who unearthed the remains at the Upward Sun River site in 2013, named this new group Ancient Beringians.[10]

The Tlingit people developed a society with a matrilineal kinship system of property inheritance and descent in what is today Southeast Alaska, along with parts of British Columbia and the Yukon. Also in Southeast were the Haida, now well known for their unique arts. The Tsimshian people came to Alaska from British Columbia in 1887, when President Grover Cleveland, and later the U.S. Congress, granted them permission to settle on Annette Island and found the town of Metlakatla. All three of these peoples, as well as other indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast, experienced smallpox outbreaks from the late 18th through the mid-19th century, with the most devastating epidemics occurring in the 1830s and 1860s, resulting in high fatalities and social disruption.[11]

The Aleutian Islands are still home to the Aleut people's seafaring society, although they were the first Native Alaskans to be exploited by the Russians. Western and Southwestern Alaska are home to the Yup'ik, while their cousins the Alutiiq ~ Sugpiaq live in what is now Southcentral Alaska. The Gwich'in people of the northern Interior region are Athabaskan and primarily known today for their dependence on the caribou within the much-contested Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The North Slope and Little Diomede Island are occupied by the widespread Inupiat people.

Colonization

 
The Russian settlement of St. Paul's Harbor (present-day Kodiak town), Kodiak Island, 1814
 
Miners and prospectors climb the Chilkoot Trail during the 1898 Klondike Gold Rush.

Some researchers believe the first Russian settlement in Alaska was established in the 17th century.[12] According to this hypothesis, in 1648 several koches of Semyon Dezhnyov's expedition came ashore in Alaska by storm and founded this settlement. This hypothesis is based on the testimony of Chukchi geographer Nikolai Daurkin, who had visited Alaska in 1764–1765 and who had reported on a village on the Kheuveren River, populated by "bearded men" who "pray to the icons". Some modern researchers associate Kheuveren with Koyuk River.[13]

The first European vessel to reach Alaska is generally held to be the St. Gabriel under the authority of the surveyor M. S. Gvozdev and assistant navigator I. Fyodorov on August 21, 1732, during an expedition of Siberian Cossack A. F. Shestakov and Russian explorer Dmitry Pavlutsky (1729–1735).[14] Another European contact with Alaska occurred in 1741, when Vitus Bering led an expedition for the Russian Navy aboard the St. Peter. After his crew returned to Russia with sea otter pelts judged to be the finest fur in the world, small associations of fur traders began to sail from the shores of Siberia toward the Aleutian Islands. The first permanent European settlement was founded in 1784.

Between 1774 and 1800, Spain sent several expeditions to Alaska to assert its claim over the Pacific Northwest. In 1789, a Spanish settlement and fort were built in Nootka Sound. These expeditions gave names to places such as Valdez, Bucareli Sound, and Cordova. Later, the Russian-American Company carried out an expanded colonization program during the early-to-mid-19th century. Sitka, renamed New Archangel from 1804 to 1867, on Baranof Island in the Alexander Archipelago in what is now Southeast Alaska, became the capital of Russian America. It remained the capital after the colony was transferred to the United States. The Russians never fully colonized Alaska, and the colony was never very profitable. Evidence of Russian settlement in names and churches survive throughout southeastern Alaska.

William H. Seward, the 24th United States Secretary of State, negotiated the Alaska Purchase (also known as Seward's Folly) with the Russians in 1867 for $7.2 million. Russia's contemporary ruler Tsar Alexander II, the Emperor of the Russian Empire, King of Poland and Grand Duke of Finland, also planned the sale;[15] the purchase was made on March 30, 1867. Six months later the commissioners arrived in Sitka and the formal transfer was arranged; the formal flag-raising took place at Fort Sitka on October 18, 1867. In the ceremony 250 uniformed U.S. soldiers marched to the governor's house at "Castle Hill", where the Russian troops lowered the Russian flag and the U.S. flag was raised. This event is celebrated as Alaska Day, a legal holiday on October 18.

Alaska was loosely governed by the military initially, and was administered as a district starting in 1884, with a governor appointed by the United States president. A federal district court was headquartered in Sitka. For most of Alaska's first decade under the United States flag, Sitka was the only community inhabited by American settlers. They organized a "provisional city government", which was Alaska's first municipal government, but not in a legal sense.[16] Legislation allowing Alaskan communities to legally incorporate as cities did not come about until 1900, and home rule for cities was extremely limited or unavailable until statehood took effect in 1959.

Alaska as an incorporated U.S. territory

Starting in the 1890s and stretching in some places to the early 1910s, gold rushes in Alaska and the nearby Yukon Territory brought thousands of miners and settlers to Alaska. Alaska was officially incorporated as an organized territory in 1912. Alaska's capital, which had been in Sitka until 1906, was moved north to Juneau. Construction of the Alaska Governor's Mansion began that same year. European immigrants from Norway and Sweden also settled in southeast Alaska, where they entered the fishing and logging industries.

 
U.S. troops navigate snow and ice during the Battle of Attu in May 1943

During World War II, the Aleutian Islands Campaign focused on Attu, Agattu and Kiska, all of which were occupied by the Empire of Japan.[17] During the Japanese occupation, a white American civilian and two United States Navy personnel were killed at Attu and Kiska respectively, and nearly a total of 50 Aleut civilians and eight sailors were interned in Japan. About half of the Aleuts died during the period of internment.[18] Unalaska/Dutch Harbor and Adak became significant bases for the United States Army, United States Army Air Forces and United States Navy. The United States Lend-Lease program involved flying American warplanes through Canada to Fairbanks and then Nome; Soviet pilots took possession of these aircraft, ferrying them to fight the German invasion of the Soviet Union. The construction of military bases contributed to the population growth of some Alaskan cities.

Statehood

 
Bob Bartlett and Ernest Gruening, Alaska's inaugural U.S. Senators, hold the 49 star U.S. Flag after the admission of Alaska as the 49th state.

Statehood for Alaska was an important cause of James Wickersham early in his tenure as a congressional delegate. Decades later, the statehood movement gained its first real momentum following a territorial referendum in 1946. The Alaska Statehood Committee and Alaska's Constitutional Convention would soon follow. Statehood supporters also found themselves fighting major battles against political foes, mostly in the U.S. Congress but also within Alaska. Statehood was approved by the U.S. Congress on July 7, 1958; Alaska was officially proclaimed a state on January 3, 1959.

Good Friday earthquake

On March 27, 1964, the massive Good Friday earthquake killed 133 people and destroyed several villages and portions of large coastal communities, mainly by the resultant tsunamis and landslides. It was the second-most-powerful earthquake in recorded history, with a moment magnitude of 9.2 (more than a thousand times as powerful as the 1989 San Francisco earthquake).[19] The time of day (5:36 pm), time of year (spring) and location of the epicenter were all cited as factors in potentially sparing thousands of lives, particularly in Anchorage.

Lasting four minutes and thirty-eight seconds, the magnitude 9.2 megathrust earthquake remains the most powerful earthquake recorded in North American history, and the second most powerful earthquake recorded in world history. Six hundred miles (970 km) of fault ruptured at once and moved up to 60 ft (18 m), releasing about 500 years of stress buildup. Soil liquefaction, fissures, landslides, and other ground failures caused major structural damage in several communities and much damage to property. Anchorage sustained great destruction or damage to many inadequately earthquake-engineered houses, buildings, and infrastructure (paved streets, sidewalks, water and sewer mains, electrical systems, and other man-made equipment), particularly in the several landslide zones along Knik Arm. Two hundred miles (320 km) southwest, some areas near Kodiak were permanently raised by 30 feet (9 m). Southeast of Anchorage, areas around the head of Turnagain Arm near Girdwood and Portage dropped as much as 8 feet (2.4 m), requiring reconstruction and fill to raise the Seward Highway above the new high tide mark.

In Prince William Sound, Port Valdez suffered a massive underwater landslide, resulting in the deaths of 32 people between the collapse of the Valdez city harbor and docks, and inside the ship that was docked there at the time. Nearby, a 27-foot (8.2 m) tsunami destroyed the village of Chenega, killing 23 of the 68 people who lived there; survivors out-ran the wave, climbing to high ground. Post-quake tsunamis severely affected Whittier, Seward, Kodiak, and other Alaskan communities, as well as people and property in British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and California.[20] Tsunamis also caused damage in Hawaii and Japan. Evidence of motion directly related to the earthquake was also reported from Florida and Texas.

There were hundreds of aftershocks in the first weeks following the main shock. In the first day alone, eleven major aftershocks were recorded with a magnitude greater than 6.0. Nine more struck over the next three weeks. In all, thousands of aftershocks occurred in the months following the quake, and smaller aftershocks continued to strike the region for more than a year.[21]

Alaska oil boom

The 1968 discovery of oil at Prudhoe Bay and the 1977 completion of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System led to an oil boom. Royalty revenues from oil have funded large state budgets from 1980 onward.

Oil production was not the only economic value of Alaska's land, however. In the second half of the 20th century, Alaska discovered tourism as an important source of revenue. Tourism became popular after World War II, when military personnel stationed in the region returned home praising its natural splendor. The Alcan Highway, built during the war, and the Alaska Marine Highway System, completed in 1963, made the state more accessible than before. Tourism became increasingly important in Alaska, and today over 1.4 million people visit the state each year.[22]

With tourism more vital to the economy, environmentalism also rose in importance. The Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA) of 1980 added 53.7 million acres (217,000 km²) to the National Wildlife Refuge system, parts of 25 rivers to the National Wild and Scenic Rivers system, 3.3 million acres (13,000 km²) to National Forest lands, and 43.6 million acres (176,000 km²) to National Park land. Because of the Act, Alaska now contains two-thirds of all American national parklands. Today, more than half of Alaskan land is owned by the Federal Government.[23]

In 1989, the Exxon Valdez hit a reef in the Prince William Sound, spilling more than 11 million U.S. gallons (42 megaliters) of crude oil over 1,100 miles (1,800 km) of coastline. Today, the battle between philosophies of development and conservation is seen in the contentious debate over oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the proposed Pebble Mine.

 
Oil pooled on rocks on the shore of Prince William Sound after the oil spill.

COVID-19 pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached the U.S. state of Alaska on March 12, 2020.[24]

On March 11, Governor Mike Dunleavy's office declared a state of emergency to ensure all entities have the necessary response resources.[25] The next day, the first case, a foreign national in Anchorage, was announced to the public.[26]

 
Ketchikan, one of the places affected by COVID-19 during the 2020 outbreak in Alaska

On March 21, 2020, Ketchikan, a small, coastal town of approximately 8,000 residents located in Southeast Alaska was determined to have a cluster of six COVID-19 cases. The town sheltered in place for the following 14 days.[27] On March 24, 2020, three more cases of COVID-19 were found in Ketchikan, bringing the total there to nine.[28] The next day, the total cases there reached 11.[29] On April 1, 2020, the number of positive cases of COVID-19 in Ketchikan rose to 14.[30]

Geography

Located at the northwest corner of North America, Alaska is the northernmost and westernmost state in the United States, but also has the most easterly longitude in the United States because the Aleutian Islands extend into the Eastern Hemisphere.[31] Alaska is the only non-contiguous U.S. state on continental North America; about 500 miles (800 km) of British Columbia (Canada) separates Alaska from Washington. It is technically part of the continental U.S., but is sometimes not included in colloquial use; Alaska is not part of the contiguous U.S., often called "the Lower 48". The capital city, Juneau, is situated on the mainland of the North American continent but is not connected by road to the rest of the North American highway system.

The state is bordered by Canada's Yukon and British Columbia to the east (making it the only state to only border a Canadian territory); the Gulf of Alaska and the Pacific Ocean to the south and southwest; the Bering Sea, Bering Strait, and Chukchi Sea to the west; and the Arctic Ocean to the north. Alaska's territorial waters touch Russia's territorial waters in the Bering Strait, as the Russian Big Diomede Island and Alaskan Little Diomede Island are only 3 miles (4.8 km) apart. Alaska has a longer coastline than all the other U.S. states combined.[32]

 

At 663,268 square miles (1,717,856 km2) in total area, Alaska is by far the largest state in the United States. Alaska is more than twice the size of the second-largest U.S. state (Texas), and it is larger than the next three largest states (Texas, California, and Montana) combined. Alaska is the seventh largest subnational division in the world. If it was an independent nation would be the 16th largest country in the world, larger than Iran.

With its myriad islands, Alaska has nearly 34,000 miles (55,000 km) of tidal shoreline. The Aleutian Islands chain extends west from the southern tip of the Alaska Peninsula. Many active volcanoes are found in the Aleutians and in coastal regions. Unimak Island, for example, is home to Mount Shishaldin, which is an occasionally smoldering volcano that rises to 10,000 feet (3,000 m) above the North Pacific. The chain of volcanoes extends to Mount Spurr, west of Anchorage on the mainland. Geologists have identified Alaska as part of Wrangellia, a large region consisting of multiple states and Canadian provinces in the Pacific Northwest, which is actively undergoing continent building.

One of the world's largest tides occurs in Turnagain Arm, just south of Anchorage, where tidal differences can be more than 35 feet (10.7 m).[33]

Alaska has more than three million lakes.[34] Marshlands and wetland permafrost cover 188,320 square miles (487,700 km2) (mostly in northern, western and southwest flatlands). Glacier ice covers about 28,957 square miles (75,000 km2) of Alaska.[35] The Bering Glacier is the largest glacier in North America, covering 2,008 square miles (5,200 km2) alone.[36]

Regions

There are no officially defined borders demarcating the various regions of Alaska, but there are six widely accepted regions:

South Central

The most populous region of Alaska, containing Anchorage, the Matanuska-Susitna Valley and the Kenai Peninsula. Rural, mostly unpopulated areas south of the Alaska Range and west of the Wrangell Mountains also fall within the definition of South Central, as do the Prince William Sound area and the communities of Cordova and Valdez.[37]

Southeast

Also referred to as the Panhandle or Inside Passage, this is the region of Alaska closest to the contiguous states. As such, this was where most of the initial non-indigenous settlement occurred in the years following the Alaska Purchase. The region is dominated by the Alexander Archipelago as well as the Tongass National Forest, the largest national forest in the United States. It contains the state capital Juneau, the former capital Sitka, and Ketchikan, at one time Alaska's largest city.[38] The Alaska Marine Highway provides a vital surface transportation link throughout the area and country, as only three communities (Haines, Hyder and Skagway) enjoy direct connections to the contiguous North American road system.[39]

Interior

 
Denali is the highest peak in North America

The Interior is the largest region of Alaska; much of it is uninhabited wilderness. Fairbanks is the only large city in the region. Denali National Park and Preserve is located here. Denali, formerly Mount McKinley, is the highest mountain in North America, and is also located here.

Southwest

Southwest Alaska is a sparsely inhabited region stretching some 500 miles (800 km) inland from the Bering Sea. Most of the population lives along the coast. Kodiak Island is also located in Southwest. The massive Yukon–Kuskokwim Delta, one of the largest river deltas in the world, is here. Portions of the Alaska Peninsula are considered part of Southwest, with the remaining portions included with the Aleutian Islands (see below).

North Slope

The North Slope is mostly tundra peppered with small villages. The area is known for its massive reserves of crude oil and contains both the National Petroleum Reserve–Alaska and the Prudhoe Bay Oil Field.[40] The city of Utqiaġvik, formerly known as Barrow, is the northernmost city in the United States and is located here. The Northwest Arctic area, anchored by Kotzebue and also containing the Kobuk River valley, is often regarded as being part of this region. However, the respective Inupiat of the North Slope and of the Northwest Arctic seldom consider themselves to be one people.[41]

Aleutian Islands

 
Although entirely east of the International Date Line (the triangular kink in the line was agreed upon the US acquisition of Alaska), the Aleutian Islands cross the 180th meridian, such that they contain both the westernmost (Amatignak) and the easternmost (Semisopochnoi.) points in the United States.

More than 300 small volcanic islands make up this chain, which stretches more than 1,200 miles (1,900 km) into the Pacific Ocean. Some of these islands fall in the Eastern Hemisphere, but the International Date Line was drawn west of 180° to keep the whole state, and thus the entire North American continent, within the same legal day. Two of the islands, Attu and Kiska, were occupied by Japanese forces during World War II.

Land ownership

According to an October 1998 report by the United States Bureau of Land Management, approximately 65% of Alaska is owned and managed by the U.S. federal government as public lands, including a multitude of national forests, national parks, and national wildlife refuges.[42] Of these, the Bureau of Land Management manages 87 million acres (35 million hectares), or 23.8% of the state. The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is managed by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. It is the world's largest wildlife refuge, comprising 16 million acres (6.5 million hectares).

Of the remaining land area, the state of Alaska owns 101 million acres (41 million hectares), its entitlement under the Alaska Statehood Act. A portion of that acreage is occasionally ceded to the organized boroughs presented above, under the statutory provisions pertaining to newly formed boroughs. Smaller portions are set aside for rural subdivisions and other homesteading-related opportunities. These are not very popular due to the often remote and roadless locations. The University of Alaska, as a land grant university, also owns substantial acreage which it manages independently.

Another 44 million acres (18 million hectares) are owned by 12 regional, and scores of local, Native corporations created under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) of 1971. Regional Native corporation Doyon, Limited often promotes itself as the largest private landowner in Alaska in advertisements and other communications. Provisions of ANCSA allowing the corporations' land holdings to be sold on the open market starting in 1991 were repealed before they could take effect. Effectively, the corporations hold title (including subsurface title in many cases, a privilege denied to individual Alaskans) but cannot sell the land. Individual Native allotments can be and are sold on the open market, however.

Various private interests own the remaining land, totaling about one percent of the state. Alaska is, by a large margin, the state with the smallest percentage of private land ownership when Native corporation holdings are excluded.

Alaska Heritage Resources Survey

The Alaska Heritage Resources Survey (AHRS) is a restricted inventory of all reported historic and prehistoric sites within the U.S. state of Alaska; it is maintained by the Office of History and Archaeology. The survey's inventory of cultural resources includes objects, structures, buildings, sites, districts, and travel ways, with a general provision that they are more than fifty years old. As of 31 January 2012, more than 35,000 sites have been reported.[43]

Cities, towns and boroughs

 
Anchorage, Alaska's largest city
 
Fairbanks, Alaska's second-largest city and by a significant margin the largest city in Alaska's interior
 
Juneau, Alaska's third-largest city and its capital
 
Bethel, the largest city in the Unorganized Borough and in rural Alaska
 
Homer, showing (from bottom to top) the edge of downtown, its airport and the Spit
 
Utqiaġvik (Browerville neighborhood near Eben Hopson Middle School shown), known colloquially for many years by the nickname "Top of the World", is the northernmost city in the United States.
 
Cordova, built in the early 20th century to support the Kennecott Mines and the Copper River and Northwestern Railway, has persevered as a fishing community since their closure.
 
Main Street in Talkeetna

Alaska is not divided into counties, as most of the other U.S. states, but it is divided into boroughs.[44] Delegates to the Alaska Constitutional Convention wanted to avoid the pitfalls of the traditional county system and adopted their own unique model.[45] Many of the more densely populated parts of the state are part of Alaska's 16 boroughs, which function somewhat similarly to counties in other states. However, unlike county-equivalents in the other 49 states, the boroughs do not cover the entire land area of the state. The area not part of any borough is referred to as the Unorganized Borough.

The Unorganized Borough has no government of its own, but the U.S. Census Bureau in cooperation with the state divided the Unorganized Borough into 11 census areas solely for the purposes of statistical analysis and presentation. A recording district is a mechanism for management of the public record in Alaska. The state is divided into 34 recording districts which are centrally administered under a state recorder. All recording districts use the same acceptance criteria, fee schedule, etc., for accepting documents into the public record.

Whereas many U.S. states use a three-tiered system of decentralization—state/county/township—most of Alaska uses only two tiers—state/borough. Owing to the low population density, most of the land is located in the Unorganized Borough. As the name implies, it has no intermediate borough government but is administered directly by the state government. In 2000, 57.71% of Alaska's area has this status, with 13.05% of the population.[46]

Anchorage merged the city government with the Greater Anchorage Area Borough in 1975 to form the Municipality of Anchorage, containing the city proper and the communities of Eagle River, Chugiak, Peters Creek, Girdwood, Bird, and Indian. Fairbanks has a separate borough (the Fairbanks North Star Borough) and municipality (the City of Fairbanks).

The state's most populous city is Anchorage, home to 291,247 people in 2020.[47] The richest location in Alaska by per capita income is Denali ($42,245). Yakutat City, Sitka, Juneau, and Anchorage are the four largest cities in the U.S. by area.

Cities and census-designated places (by population)

As reflected in the 2020 United States census, Alaska has a total of 355 incorporated cities and census-designated places (CDPs).[48] The tally of cities includes four unified municipalities, essentially the equivalent of a consolidated city–county. The majority of these communities are located in the rural expanse of Alaska known as "The Bush" and are unconnected to that contiguous North American road network. The table at the bottom of this section lists about the 100 largest cities and census-designated places in Alaska, in population order.

Of Alaska's 2020 U.S. census population figure of 733,391, 16,655 people, or 2.27% of the population, did not live in an incorporated city or census-designated place.[47] Approximately three-quarters of that figure were people who live in urban and suburban neighborhoods on the outskirts of the city limits of Ketchikan, Kodiak, Palmer and Wasilla. CDPs have not been established for these areas by the United States Census Bureau, except that seven CDPs were established for the Ketchikan-area neighborhoods in the 1980 Census (Clover Pass, Herring Cove, Ketchikan East, Mountain Point, North Tongass Highway, Pennock Island and Saxman East), but have not been used since. The remaining population was scattered throughout Alaska, both within organized boroughs and in the Unorganized Borough, in largely remote areas.

No. Community name Type 2020 Pop.[47]
1 Anchorage City 291,247
2 Fairbanks City 32,515
3 Juneau City 32,255
4 Knik-Fairview CDP 19,297
5 Badger CDP 19,031
6 College CDP 11,332
7 North Lakes CDP 9,450
8 Meadow Lakes CDP 9,197
9 Wasilla City 9,054
10 Tanaina CDP 8,817
11 Kalifornsky CDP 8,487
12 Sitka City 8,458
13 Ketchikan City 8,192
14 Kenai City 7,424
15 Steele Creek CDP 6,437
16 Bethel City 6,325
17 Chena Ridge CDP 6,015
18 Sterling CDP 5,918
19 Palmer City 5,888
20 Gateway CDP 5,748
21 Kodiak City 5,581
22 Homer City 5,522
23 South Lakes CDP 5,229
24 Fishhook CDP 5,048
25 Utqiaġvik City 4,927
26 Farmers Loop CDP 4,704
27 Nikiski CDP 4,456
28 Soldotna City 4,342
29 Unalaska City 4,254
30 Mill Bay CDP 4,216
31 Valdez City 3,985
32 Big Lake CDP 3,833
33 Nome City 3,699
34 Butte CDP 3,589
35 Goldstream CDP 3,299
36 Kotzebue City 3,102
37 Petersburg City 3,043
38 Farm Loop CDP 2,747
39 Seward City 2,717
40 Eielson AFB CDP 2,610
41 Cordova City 2,609
42 Ester CDP 2,416
43 Deltana CDP 2,359
44 Dillingham City 2,249
45 Fritz Creek CDP 2,248
46 North Pole City 2,243
47 Willow CDP 2,196
48 Ridgeway CDP 2,136
49 Bear Creek CDP 2,129
50 Wrangell City 2,127
No. Community name Type 2020 Pop.
51 Anchor Point CDP 2,105
52 Houston City 1,975
53 Point MacKenzie CDP 1,852
54 Kodiak Station CDP 1,673
55 Haines CDP 1,657
56 Akutan City 1,589
57 Susitna North CDP 1,564
58 Lazy Mountain CDP 1,506
59 Cohoe CDP 1,471
60 Metlakatla CDP 1,454
61 Hooper Bay City 1,375
62 Diamond Ridge CDP 1,330
63 Prudhoe Bay CDP 1,310
64 Tok CDP 1,243
65 Skagway CDP 1,164
66 Funny River CDP 1,103
67 Salamatof CDP 1,078
68 Talkeetna CDP 1,055
69 Sutton-Alpine CDP 1,038
70 Craig City 1,036
71 Buffalo Soapstone CDP 1,021
72 Salcha CDP 977
73 Healy CDP 966
74 Chevak City 951
75 Hoonah City 931
76 Delta Junction City 918
77 Ninilchik CDP 845
78 Savoonga City 835
79 Point Hope City 830
80 Emmonak City 825
81 Togiak City 817
82 Kwethluk City 812
83 Selawik City 809
84 Knik River CDP 792
85 Quinhagak City 776
86 Unalakleet City 765
87 King Cove City 757
88 Alakanuk City 756
89 Womens Bay CDP 743
90 Klawock City 720
91 Happy Valley CDP 713
92 Kipnuk CDP 704
93 Noorvik City 694
94 Akiachak CDP 677
95 Toksook Bay City 658
96 Yakutat CDP 657
97 Gustavus CDP 655
Kotlik CDP
99 Two Rivers CDP 650
100 Fox River CDP 644

Climate

 
Alaska has largest acreage of public land owned by the federal government than any other state.[49]

The climate in south and southeastern Alaska is a mid-latitude oceanic climate (Köppen climate classification: Cfb), and a subarctic oceanic climate (Köppen Cfc) in the northern parts. On an annual basis, the southeast is both the wettest and warmest part of Alaska with milder temperatures in the winter and high precipitation throughout the year. Juneau averages over 50 in (130 cm) of precipitation a year, and Ketchikan averages over 150 in (380 cm).[50] This is also the only region in Alaska in which the average daytime high temperature is above freezing during the winter months.

The climate of Anchorage and south central Alaska is mild by Alaskan standards due to the region's proximity to the seacoast. While the area gets less rain than southeast Alaska, it gets more snow, and days tend to be clearer. On average, Anchorage receives 16 in (41 cm) of precipitation a year, with around 75 in (190 cm) of snow, although there are areas in the south central which receive far more snow. It is a subarctic climate (Köppen: Dfc) due to its brief, cool summers.

The climate of western Alaska is determined in large part by the Bering Sea and the Gulf of Alaska. It is a subarctic oceanic climate in the southwest and a continental subarctic climate farther north. The temperature is somewhat moderate considering how far north the area is. This region has a tremendous amount of variety in precipitation. An area stretching from the northern side of the Seward Peninsula to the Kobuk River valley (i.e., the region around Kotzebue Sound) is technically a desert, with portions receiving less than 10 in (25 cm) of precipitation annually. On the other extreme, some locations between Dillingham and Bethel average around 100 in (250 cm) of precipitation.[51]

The climate of the interior of Alaska is subarctic. Some of the highest and lowest temperatures in Alaska occur around the area near Fairbanks. The summers may have temperatures reaching into the 90s °F (the low-to-mid 30s °C), while in the winter, the temperature can fall below −60 °F (−51 °C). Precipitation is sparse in the Interior, often less than 10 in (25 cm) a year, but what precipitation falls in the winter tends to stay the entire winter.

The highest and lowest recorded temperatures in Alaska are both in the Interior. The highest is 100 °F (38 °C) in Fort Yukon (which is just 8 mi or 13 km inside the arctic circle) on June 27, 1915,[52][53] making Alaska tied with Hawaii as the state with the lowest high temperature in the United States.[54][55] The lowest official Alaska temperature is −80 °F (−62 °C) in Prospect Creek on January 23, 1971,[52][53] one degree above the lowest temperature recorded in continental North America (in Snag, Yukon, Canada).[56]

The climate in the extreme north of Alaska is Arctic (Köppen: ET) with long, very cold winters and short, cool summers. Even in July, the average low temperature in Utqiaġvik is 34 °F (1 °C).[57] Precipitation is light in this part of Alaska, with many places averaging less than 10 in (25 cm) per year, mostly as snow which stays on the ground almost the entire year.

Average daily maximum and minimum temperatures for selected locations in Alaska[58]
Location July (°F) July (°C) January (°F) January (°C)
Anchorage 65/51 18/10 22/11 −5/−11
Juneau 64/50 17/11 32/23 0/−4
Ketchikan 64/51 17/11 38/28 3/−1
Unalaska 57/46 14/8 36/28 2/−2
Fairbanks 72/53 22/11 1/−17 −17/−27
Fort Yukon 73/51 23/10 −11/−27 −23/−33
Nome 58/46 14/8 13/−2 −10/−19
Utqiaġvik 47/34 08/1 −7/−19 −21/−28

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
188033,426
189032,052−4.1%
190063,59298.4%
191064,3561.2%
192055,036−14.5%
193059,2787.7%
194072,52422.3%
1950128,64377.4%
1960226,16775.8%
1970300,38232.8%
1980401,85133.8%
1990550,04336.9%
2000626,93214.0%
2010710,23113.3%
2020733,3913.3%
1930 and 1940 censuses taken in preceding autumn
Sources: 1910–2020[59]

The United States Census Bureau found in the 2020 United States census that the population of Alaska was 736,081 on April 1, 2020, a 3.6% increase since the 2010 United States census.[3] According to the 2010 United States census, the U.S. state of Alaska had a population of 710,231, increasing from 626,932 at the 2000 U.S. census.

In 2010, Alaska ranked as the 47th state by population, ahead of North Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming (and Washington, D.C.). Estimates show North Dakota ahead as of 2018.[60] Alaska is the least densely populated state, and one of the most sparsely populated areas in the world, at 1.2 inhabitants per square mile (0.46/km2), with the next state, Wyoming, at 5.8 inhabitants per square mile (2.2/km2).[61] Alaska is by far the largest U.S. state by area, and the tenth wealthiest (per capita income).[62] As of 2018 due to its population size, it is one of 14 U.S. states that still have only one telephone area code.[63]

Race and ethnicity

Alaska racial breakdown of population
Racial composition 1970[64] 1990[64] 2000[65] 2010[66] 2020[67]
White 78.8% 75.5% 69.3% 66.7% 59.4%
Native 16.9% 15.6% 15.6% 14.8% 15.2%
Asian 0.9% 3.6% 4.0% 5.4% 6.0%
Black 3.0% 4.1% 3.5% 3.3% 3.0%
Native Hawaiian and
other Pacific Islander
0.5% 1.0% 1.7%
Other race 0.4% 1.2% 1.6% 1.6% 2.5%
Multiracial 5.5% 7.3% 12.2%
 
Map of the largest racial/ethnic group by borough. Red indicates Native American, blue indicates non-Hispanic white, and green indicates Asian. Darker shades indicate a higher proportion of the population.

The 2019 American Community Survey estimated 60.2% of the population was non-Hispanic white, 3.7% black or African American, 15.6% American Indian or Alaska Native, 6.5% Asian, 1.4% Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander, 7.5% two or more races, and 7.3% Hispanic or Latin American of any race. At the survey estimates, 7.8% of the total population was foreign-born from 2015 to 2019.[68] In 2015, 61.3% was non-Hispanic white, 3.4% black or African American, 13.3% American Indian or Alaska Native, 6.2% Asian, 0.9% Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander, 0.3% some other race, and 7.7% multiracial. Hispanics and Latin Americans were 7% of the state population in 2015.[69] From 2015 to 2019, the largest Hispanic and Latin American groups were Mexican Americans, Puerto Ricans, and Cuban Americans. The largest Asian groups living in the state were Filipinos, Korean Americans, and Japanese and Chinese Americans.[70]

The state was 66.7% white (64.1% non-Hispanic white), 14.8% American Indian and Alaska Native, 5.4% Asian, 3.3% black or African American, 1.0% Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander, 1.6% from some other race, and 7.3% from two or more races in 2010. Hispanics or Latin Americans of any race made up 5.5% of the population in 2010.[71] As of 2011, 50.7% of Alaska's population younger than one year of age belonged to minority groups (i.e., did not have two parents of non-Hispanic white ancestry).[72] In 1960, the United States Census Bureau reported Alaska's population as 77.2% white, 3% black, and 18.8% American Indian and Alaska Native.[73]

Languages

According to the 2011 American Community Survey, 83.4% of people over the age of five spoke only English at home. About 3.5% spoke Spanish at home, 2.2% spoke another Indo-European language, about 4.3% spoke an Asian language (including Tagalog),[74] and about 5.3% spoke other languages at home.[75] In 2019, the American Community Survey determined 83.7% spoke only English, and 16.3% spoke another language other than English. The most spoken European language after English was Spanish, spoken by approximately 4.0% of the state population. Collectively, Asian and Pacific Islander languages were spoken by 5.6% of Alaskans.[76] Since 2010, a total of 5.2% of Alaskans speak one of the state's 20 indigenous languages,[77] known locally as "native languages".

The Alaska Native Language Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks claims that at least 20 Alaskan native languages exist and there are also some languages with different dialects.[78] Most of Alaska's native languages belong to either the Eskimo–Aleut or Na-Dene language families; however, some languages are thought to be isolates (e.g. Haida) or have not yet been classified (e.g. Tsimshianic).[78] As of 2014 nearly all of Alaska's native languages were classified as either threatened, shifting, moribund, nearly extinct, or dormant languages.[79]

In October 2014, the governor of Alaska signed a bill declaring the state's 20 indigenous languages to have official status.[80][81] This bill gave them symbolic recognition as official languages, though they have not been adopted for official use within the government. The 20 languages that were included in the bill are:

Religion

 
Gold Rush-era Baptist church in Eagle
 
 
ChangePoint in south Anchorage (left) and Anchorage Baptist Temple in east Anchorage (right) are Alaska's largest churches in terms of attendance and membership.

According to statistics collected by the Association of Religion Data Archives from 2010, about 34% of Alaska residents were members of religious congregations. Of the religious population, 100,960 people identified as evangelical Protestants; 50,866 as Roman Catholic; and 32,550 as mainline Protestants.[82] Roughly 4% were Mormon, 0.5% Jewish, 0.5% Muslim, 1% Buddhist, 0.2% Baháʼí, and 0.5% Hindu.[83] The largest religious denominations in Alaska as of 2010 was the Roman Catholic Church with 50,866 adherents; non-denominational Evangelicals with 38,070 adherents; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints with 32,170 adherents; and the Southern Baptist Convention with 19,891 adherents.[84] Alaska has been identified, along with Washington and Oregon in the Pacific Northwest, as being the least religious states in the United States, in terms of church membership.[85][86]

The Pew Research Center in 2014 determined 62% of the adult population practiced Christianity. Protestantism was the largest Christian tradition, dominated by Evangelicalism. Mainline Protestants were the second largest Protestant Christian group, followed by predominantly African American churches. The Roman Catholic Church remained the largest single Christian tradition practiced in Alaska. Of the unaffiliated population, they made up the largest non-Christian religious affiliation. Atheists made up 5% of the population and the largest non-Christian religion was Buddhism. In 2020, the Public Religion Research Institute determined 57% of adults were Christian.[87]

In 1795, the first Russian Orthodox Church was established in Kodiak. Intermarriage with Alaskan Natives helped the Russian immigrants integrate into society. As a result, an increasing number of Russian Orthodox churches gradually became established within Alaska.[88] Alaska also has the largest Quaker population (by percentage) of any state.[89] In 2009, there were 6,000 Jews in Alaska (for whom observance of halakha may pose special problems).[90] Alaskan Hindus often share venues and celebrations with members of other Asian religious communities, including Sikhs and Jains.[91][92][93] In 2010, Alaskan Hindus established the Sri Ganesha Temple of Alaska, making it the first Hindu Temple in Alaska and the northernmost Hindu Temple in the world. There are an estimated 2,000–3,000 Hindus in Alaska. The vast majority of Hindus live in Anchorage or Fairbanks.

Estimates for the number of Muslims in Alaska range from 2,000 to 5,000.[94][95][96] The Islamic Community Center of Anchorage began efforts in the late 1990s to construct a mosque in Anchorage. They broke ground on a building in south Anchorage in 2010 and were nearing completion in late 2014. When completed, the mosque will be the first in the state and one of the northernmost mosques in the world.[97] There's also a Baháʼí center.[98]

Religious affiliation in Alaska (2014)[99]
Affiliation % of population
Christian 62 62
 
Protestant 37 37
 
Evangelical Protestant 22 22
 
Mainline Protestant 12 12
 
Black church 3 3
 
Catholic 16 16
 
Mormon 5 5
 
Jehovah's Witnesses 0.5 0.5
 
Eastern Orthodox 5 5
 
Other Christian 0.5 0.5
 
Unaffiliated 31 31
 
Nothing in particular 20 20
 
Agnostic 6 6
 
Atheist 5 5
 
Non-Christian faiths 6 6
 
Jewish 0.5 0.5
 
Muslim 0.5 0.5
 
Baháʼí 0.2 0.2
 
Buddhist 1 1
 
Hindu 0.5 0.5
 
Other Non-Christian faiths 4 4
 
Don't know/refused answer 1 1
 
Total 100 100
 

Economy

 
Aerial view of infrastructure at the Prudhoe Bay Oil Field

As of October 2022, Alaska had a total employment of 316,900. The number of employer establishments was 21,077.[100]

The 2018 gross state product was $55 billion, 48th in the U.S. Its per capita personal income for 2018 was $73,000, ranking 7th in the nation. According to a 2013 study by Phoenix Marketing International, Alaska had the fifth-largest number of millionaires per capita in the United States, with a ratio of 6.75 percent.[101] The oil and gas industry dominates the Alaskan economy, with more than 80% of the state's revenues derived from petroleum extraction. Alaska's main export product (excluding oil and natural gas) is seafood, primarily salmon, cod, pollock and crab.

Agriculture represents a very small fraction of the Alaskan economy. Agricultural production is primarily for consumption within the state and includes nursery stock, dairy products, vegetables, and livestock. Manufacturing is limited, with most foodstuffs and general goods imported from elsewhere.

Employment is primarily in government and industries such as natural resource extraction, shipping, and transportation. Military bases are a significant component of the economy in the Fairbanks North Star, Anchorage and Kodiak Island boroughs, as well as Kodiak. Federal subsidies are also an important part of the economy, allowing the state to keep taxes low. Its industrial outputs are crude petroleum, natural gas, coal, gold, precious metals, zinc and other mining, seafood processing, timber and wood products. There is also a growing service and tourism sector. Tourists have contributed to the economy by supporting local lodging.

Energy

 
The Trans-Alaska Pipeline transports oil, Alaska's most financially important export, from the North Slope to Valdez. The heat pipes in the column mounts are pertinent, since they disperse heat upwards and prevent melting of permafrost.
 
Alaska proven oil reserves peaked in 1973 and have declined more than 60% since then.
 
Alaskan oil production peaked in 1988 and has declined more than 75% since then.

Alaska has vast energy resources, although its oil reserves have been largely depleted. Major oil and gas reserves were found in the Alaska North Slope (ANS) and Cook Inlet basins, but according to the Energy Information Administration, by February 2014 Alaska had fallen to fourth place in the nation in crude oil production after Texas, North Dakota, and California.[102][103] Prudhoe Bay on Alaska's North Slope is still the second highest-yielding oil field in the United States, typically producing about 400,000 barrels per day (64,000 m3/d), although by early 2014 North Dakota's Bakken Formation was producing over 900,000 barrels per day (140,000 m3/d).[104] Prudhoe Bay was the largest conventional oil field ever discovered in North America, but was much smaller than Canada's enormous Athabasca oil sands field, which by 2014 was producing about 1,500,000 barrels per day (240,000 m3/d) of unconventional oil, and had hundreds of years of producible reserves at that rate.[105]

The Trans-Alaska Pipeline can transport and pump up to 2.1 million barrels (330,000 m3) of crude oil per day, more than any other crude oil pipeline in the United States. Additionally, substantial coal deposits are found in Alaska's bituminous, sub-bituminous, and lignite coal basins. The United States Geological Survey estimates that there are 85.4 trillion cubic feet (2,420 km3) of undiscovered, technically recoverable gas from natural gas hydrates on the Alaskan North Slope.[106] Alaska also offers some of the highest hydroelectric power potential in the country from its numerous rivers. Large swaths of the Alaskan coastline offer wind and geothermal energy potential as well.[107]

Alaska's economy depends heavily on increasingly expensive diesel fuel for heating, transportation, electric power and light. Although wind and hydroelectric power are abundant and underdeveloped, proposals for statewide energy systems (e.g. with special low-cost electric interties) were judged uneconomical (at the time of the report, 2001) due to low (less than 50¢/gal) fuel prices, long distances and low population.[108] The cost of a gallon of gas in urban Alaska today is usually thirty to sixty cents higher than the national average; prices in rural areas are generally significantly higher but vary widely depending on transportation costs, seasonal usage peaks, nearby petroleum development infrastructure and many other factors.

Permanent Fund

The Alaska Permanent Fund is a constitutionally authorized appropriation of oil revenues, established by voters in 1976 to manage a surplus in state petroleum revenues from oil, largely in anticipation of the then recently constructed Trans-Alaska Pipeline System. The fund was originally proposed by Governor Keith Miller on the eve of the 1969 Prudhoe Bay lease sale, out of fear that the legislature would spend the entire proceeds of the sale (which amounted to $900 million) at once. It was later championed by Governor Jay Hammond and Kenai state representative Hugh Malone. It has served as an attractive political prospect ever since, diverting revenues which would normally be deposited into the general fund.

The Alaska Constitution was written so as to discourage dedicating state funds for a particular purpose. The Permanent Fund has become the rare exception to this, mostly due to the political climate of distrust existing during the time of its creation. From its initial principal of $734,000, the fund has grown to $50 billion as a result of oil royalties and capital investment programs.[109] Most if not all the principal is invested conservatively outside Alaska. This has led to frequent calls by Alaskan politicians for the Fund to make investments within Alaska, though such a stance has never gained momentum.

Starting in 1982, dividends from the fund's annual growth have been paid out each year to eligible Alaskans, ranging from an initial $1,000 in 1982 (equal to three years' payout, as the distribution of payments was held up in a lawsuit over the distribution scheme) to $3,269 in 2008 (which included a one-time $1,200 "Resource Rebate"). Every year, the state legislature takes out 8% from the earnings, puts 3% back into the principal for inflation proofing, and the remaining 5% is distributed to all qualifying Alaskans. To qualify for the Permanent Fund Dividend, one must have lived in the state for a minimum of 12 months, maintain constant residency subject to allowable absences,[110] and not be subject to court judgments or criminal convictions which fall under various disqualifying classifications or may subject the payment amount to civil garnishment.

The Permanent Fund is often considered to be one of the leading examples of a basic income policy in the world.[111]

Cost of living

The cost of goods in Alaska has long been higher than in the contiguous 48 states. Federal government employees, particularly United States Postal Service (USPS) workers and active-duty military members, receive a Cost of Living Allowance usually set at 25% of base pay because, while the cost of living has gone down, it is still one of the highest in the country.[112]

Rural Alaska suffers from extremely high prices for food and consumer goods compared to the rest of the country, due to the relatively limited transportation infrastructure.[112]

Agriculture and fishing

 
Halibut, both as a sport fish and commercially, is important to the state's economy.

Due to the northern climate and short growing season, relatively little farming occurs in Alaska. Most farms are in either the Matanuska Valley, about 40 miles (64 km) northeast of Anchorage, or on the Kenai Peninsula, about 60 miles (97 km) southwest of Anchorage. The short 100-day growing season limits the crops that can be grown, but the long sunny summer days make for productive growing seasons. The primary crops are potatoes, carrots, lettuce, and cabbage.

The Tanana Valley is another notable agricultural locus, especially the Delta Junction area, about 100 miles (160 km) southeast of Fairbanks, with a sizable concentration of farms growing agronomic crops; these farms mostly lie north and east of Fort Greely. This area was largely set aside and developed under a state program spearheaded by Hammond during his second term as governor. Delta-area crops consist predominantly of barley and hay. West of Fairbanks lies another concentration of small farms catering to restaurants, the hotel and tourist industry, and community-supported agriculture.

Alaskan agriculture has experienced a surge in growth of market gardeners, small farms and farmers' markets in recent years, with the highest percentage increase (46%) in the nation in growth in farmers' markets in 2011, compared to 17% nationwide.[113] The peony industry has also taken off, as the growing season allows farmers to harvest during a gap in supply elsewhere in the world, thereby filling a niche in the flower market.[114]

 
 
Oversized vegetables on display at the Alaska State Fair (left) and the Tanana Valley State Fair (right)

Alaska, with no counties, lacks county fairs. However, a small assortment of state and local fairs (with the Alaska State Fair in Palmer the largest), are held mostly in the late summer. The fairs are mostly located in communities with historic or current agricultural activity, and feature local farmers exhibiting produce in addition to more high-profile commercial activities such as carnival rides, concerts and food. "Alaska Grown" is used as an agricultural slogan.

Alaska has an abundance of seafood, with the primary fisheries in the Bering Sea and the North Pacific. Seafood is one of the few food items that is often cheaper within the state than outside it. Many Alaskans take advantage of salmon seasons to harvest portions of their household diet while fishing for subsistence, as well as sport. This includes fish taken by hook, net or wheel.[115]

Hunting for subsistence, primarily caribou, moose, and Dall sheep is still common in the state, particularly in remote Bush communities. An example of a traditional native food is Akutaq, the Eskimo ice cream, which can consist of reindeer fat, seal oil, dried fish meat and local berries.

Alaska's reindeer herding is concentrated on Seward Peninsula, where wild caribou can be prevented from mingling and migrating with the domesticated reindeer.[116]

Most food in Alaska is transported into the state from "Outside" (the other 49 US states), and shipping costs make food in the cities relatively expensive. In rural areas, subsistence hunting and gathering is an essential activity because imported food is prohibitively expensive. Although most small towns and villages in Alaska lie along the coastline, the cost of importing food to remote villages can be high, because of the terrain and difficult road conditions, which change dramatically, due to varying climate and precipitation changes. The cost of transport can reach as high as 50¢ per pound ($1.10/kg) or more in some remote areas, during the most difficult times, if these locations can be reached at all during such inclement weather and terrain conditions. The cost of delivering a 1 US gallon (3.8 L) of milk is about $3.50 in many villages where per capita income can be $20,000 or less. Fuel cost per gallon is routinely twenty to thirty cents higher than the contiguous United States average, with only Hawaii having higher prices.[117][118]

Culture

 
A dog team in the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, arguably the most popular winter event in Alaska
 
Mask Display at Iñupiat Heritage Center in Utqiaġvik

Some of Alaska's popular annual events are the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race from Anchorage to Nome, World Ice Art Championships in Fairbanks, the Blueberry Festival and Alaska Hummingbird Festival in Ketchikan, the Sitka Whale Fest, and the Stikine River Garnet Fest in Wrangell. The Stikine River attracts the largest springtime concentration of American bald eagles in the world.

The Alaska Native Heritage Center celebrates the rich heritage of Alaska's 11 cultural groups. Their purpose is to encourage cross-cultural exchanges among all people and enhance self-esteem among Native people. The Alaska Native Arts Foundation promotes and markets Native art from all regions and cultures in the State, using the internet.[119]

Music

Influences on music in Alaska include the traditional music of Alaska Natives as well as folk music brought by later immigrants from Russia and Europe. Prominent musicians from Alaska include singer Jewel, traditional Aleut flautist Mary Youngblood, folk singer-songwriter Libby Roderick, Christian music singer-songwriter Lincoln Brewster, metal/post hardcore band 36 Crazyfists and the groups Pamyua and Portugal. The Man.

There are many established music festivals in Alaska, including the Alaska Folk Festival, the Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival the Anchorage Folk Festival, the Athabascan Old-Time Fiddling Festival, the Sitka Jazz Festival, and the Sitka Summer Music Festival. The most prominent orchestra in Alaska is the Anchorage Symphony Orchestra, though the Fairbanks Symphony Orchestra and Juneau Symphony are also notable. The Anchorage Opera is currently the state's only professional opera company, though there are several volunteer and semi-professional organizations in the state as well.

The official state song of Alaska is "Alaska's Flag", which was adopted in 1955; it celebrates the flag of Alaska.

Alaska in film/television/videogames

 
Films featuring Alaskan wolves usually employ domesticated wolf-dog hybrids to stand in for wild wolves.

Alaska's first independent picture entirely made in Alaska was The Chechahcos, produced by Alaskan businessman Austin E. Lathrop and filmed in and around Anchorage. Released in 1924 by the Alaska Moving Picture Corporation, it was the only film the company made.

One of the most prominent movies filmed in Alaska is MGM's Eskimo/Mala The Magnificent, starring Alaska Native Ray Mala. In 1932, an expedition set out from MGM's studios in Hollywood to Alaska to film what was then billed as "The Biggest Picture Ever Made". Upon arriving in Alaska, they set up "Camp Hollywood" in Northwest Alaska, where they lived during the duration of the filming. Louis B. Mayer spared no expense in spite of the remote location, going so far as to hire the chef from the Hotel Roosevelt in Hollywood to prepare meals.[citation needed]

When Eskimo premiered at the Astor Theatre in New York City, the studio received the largest amount of feedback in its history. Eskimo was critically acclaimed and released worldwide; as a result, Mala became an international movie star. Eskimo won the first Oscar for Best Film Editing at the Academy Awards, and showcased and preserved aspects of Inupiat culture on film.

The 1983 Disney movie Never Cry Wolf was at least partially shot in Alaska. The 1991 film White Fang, based on Jack London's 1906 novel and starring Ethan Hawke, was filmed in and around Haines. Steven Seagal's 1994 On Deadly Ground, starring Michael Caine, was filmed in part at the Worthington Glacier near Valdez.[120] The 1999 John Sayles film Limbo, starring David Strathairn, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, and Kris Kristofferson, was filmed in Juneau.

The psychological thriller Insomnia, starring Al Pacino and Robin Williams, was shot in Canada, but was set in Alaska. The 2007 film directed by Sean Penn, Into The Wild, was partially filmed and set in Alaska. The film, which is based on the novel of the same name, follows the adventures of Christopher McCandless, who died in a remote abandoned bus along the Stampede Trail west of Healy in 1992.

Many films and television shows set in Alaska are not filmed there; for example, Northern Exposure, set in the fictional town of Cicely, Alaska, was filmed in Roslyn, Washington. The 2007 horror feature 30 Days of Night is set in Barrow, Alaska[note 1], but was filmed in New Zealand.

Many reality television shows are filmed in Alaska. In 2011, the Anchorage Daily News found ten set in the state.[121]

The 2020 videogame Tell Me Why (video game) takes place around Southern Alaska and includes representation of Tlingit culture.

Sports

Public health and public safety

The Alaska State Troopers are Alaska's statewide police force. They have a long and storied history, but were not an official organization until 1941. Before the force was officially organized, law enforcement in Alaska was handled by various federal agencies. Larger towns usually have their own local police and some villages rely on "Public Safety Officers" who have police training but do not carry firearms. In much of the state, the troopers serve as the only police force available. In addition to enforcing traffic and criminal law, wildlife Troopers enforce hunting and fishing regulations. Due to the varied terrain and wide scope of the Troopers' duties, they employ a wide variety of land, air, and water patrol vehicles.

Many rural communities in Alaska are considered "dry", having outlawed the importation of alcoholic beverages.[122] Suicide rates for rural residents are higher than urban.[123]

Domestic abuse and other violent crimes are also at high levels in the state; this is in part linked to alcohol abuse.[124] Alaska has the highest rate of sexual assault in the nation, especially in rural areas. The average age of sexually assaulted victims is 16 years old. In four out of five cases, the suspects were relatives, friends or acquaintances.[125]

Education

 
The Kachemak Bay Campus of the University of Alaska Anchorage, located in downtown Homer

The Alaska Department of Education and Early Development administers many school districts in Alaska. In addition, the state operates a boarding school, Mt. Edgecumbe High School in Sitka, and provides partial funding for other boarding schools, including Nenana Student Living Center in Nenana and The Galena Interior Learning Academy in Galena.[126]

There are more than a dozen colleges and universities in Alaska. Accredited universities in Alaska include the University of Alaska Anchorage, University of Alaska Fairbanks, University of Alaska Southeast, and Alaska Pacific University.[127] Alaska is the only state that has no collegiate athletic programs that are members of NCAA Division I, although both Alaska-Fairbanks and Alaska-Anchorage maintain single sport membership in Division I for men's ice hockey.

The Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development operates AVTEC, Alaska's Institute of Technology.[128] Campuses in Seward and Anchorage offer one-week to 11-month training programs in areas as diverse as Information Technology, Welding, Nursing, and Mechanics.

Alaska has had a problem with a "brain drain". Many of its young people, including most of the highest academic achievers, leave the state after high school graduation and do not return. As of 2013, Alaska did not have a law school or medical school.[129] The University of Alaska has attempted to combat this by offering partial four-year scholarships to the top 10% of Alaska high school graduates, via the Alaska Scholars Program.[130]

Beginning in 1998, schools in rural Alaska must have at least 10 students to retain funding from the state, and campuses not meeting the number close. This was due to the loss in oil revenues that previously propped up smaller rural schools.[131] In 2015, there was a proposal to raise that minimum to 25,[132] but legislators in the state largely did not agree.[133]

Transportation

Roads

Alaska has few road connections compared to the rest of the U.S. The state's road system, covering a relatively small area of the state, linking the central population centers and the Alaska Highway, the principal route out of the state through Canada. The state capital, Juneau, is not accessible by road, only a car ferry; this has spurred debate over decades about moving the capital to a city on the road system, or building a road connection from Haines. The western part of Alaska has no road system connecting the communities with the rest of Alaska.

The Interstate Highways in Alaska consists of a total of 1,082 miles (1,741 km). One unique feature of the Alaska Highway system is the Anton Anderson Memorial Tunnel, an active Alaska Railroad tunnel recently upgraded to provide a paved roadway link with the isolated community of Whittier on Prince William Sound to the Seward Highway about 50 miles (80 km) southeast of Anchorage at Portage. At 2.5 miles (4.0 km), the tunnel was the longest road tunnel in North America until 2007.[134] The tunnel is the longest combination road and rail tunnel in North America.

Rail

Built around 1915, the Alaska Railroad (ARR) played a key role in the development of Alaska through the 20th century. It links north Pacific shipping through providing critical infrastructure with tracks that run from Seward to Interior Alaska by way of South Central Alaska, passing through Anchorage, Eklutna, Wasilla, Talkeetna, Denali, and Fairbanks, with spurs to Whittier, Palmer and North Pole. The cities, towns, villages, and region served by ARR tracks are known statewide as "The Railbelt". In recent years, the ever-improving paved highway system began to eclipse the railroad's importance in Alaska's economy.

The railroad played a vital role in Alaska's development, moving freight into Alaska while transporting natural resources southward, such as coal from the Usibelli coal mine near Healy to Seward and gravel from the Matanuska Valley to Anchorage. It is well known for its summertime tour passenger service.

The Alaska Railroad was one of the last railroads in North America to use cabooses in regular service and still uses them on some gravel trains. It continues to offer one of the last flag stop routes in the country. A stretch of about 60 miles (100 km) of track along an area north of Talkeetna remains inaccessible by road; the railroad provides the only transportation to rural homes and cabins in the area. Until construction of the Parks Highway in the 1970s, the railroad provided the only land access to most of the region along its entire route.

In northern Southeast Alaska, the White Pass and Yukon Route also partly runs through the state from Skagway northwards into Canada (British Columbia and Yukon Territory), crossing the border at White Pass Summit. This line is now mainly used by tourists, often arriving by cruise liner at Skagway. It was featured in the 1983 BBC television series Great Little Railways.

The Alaska Rail network is not connected to Outside. (The nearest link to the North American railway network is the northwest terminus of the Canadian National Railway at Prince Rupert, British Columbia, several hundred miles to the southeast.) In 2000, the U.S. Congress authorized $6 million to study the feasibility of a rail link between Alaska, Canada, and the lower 48.[135][136][137]

Some private companies provides car float service between Whittier and Seattle.

Marine transport

Many cities, towns and villages in the state do not have road or highway access; the only modes of access involve travel by air, river, or the sea.

 
The MV Tustumena (named after Tustumena Glacier) is one of the state's many ferries, providing service between the Kenai Peninsula, Kodiak Island and the Aleutian Chain.

Alaska's well-developed state-owned ferry system (known as the Alaska Marine Highway) serves the cities of southeast, the Gulf Coast and the Alaska Peninsula. The ferries transport vehicles as well as passengers. The system also operates a ferry service from Bellingham, Washington and Prince Rupert, British Columbia, in Canada through the Inside Passage to Skagway. The Inter-Island Ferry Authority also serves as an important marine link for many communities in the Prince of Wales Island region of Southeast and works in concert with the Alaska Marine Highway.

In recent years, cruise lines have created a summertime tourism market, mainly connecting the Pacific Northwest to Southeast Alaska and, to a lesser degree, towns along Alaska's gulf coast. The population of Ketchikan for example fluctuates dramatically on many days—up to four large cruise ships can dock there at the same time.

Air transport

Cities not served by road, sea, or river can be reached only by air, foot, dogsled, or snowmachine, accounting for Alaska's extremely well developed bush air services—an Alaskan novelty. Anchorage and, to a lesser extent Fairbanks, is served by many major airlines. Because of limited highway access, air travel remains the most efficient form of transportation in and out of the state. Anchorage recently completed extensive remodeling and construction at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport to help accommodate the upsurge in tourism (in 2012–2013, Alaska received almost two million visitors).[138]

Regular flights to most villages and towns within the state that are commercially viable are challenging to provide, so they are heavily subsidized by the federal government through the Essential Air Service program. Alaska Airlines is the only major airline offering in-state travel with jet service (sometimes in combination cargo and passenger Boeing 737-400s) from Anchorage and Fairbanks to regional hubs like Bethel, Nome, Kotzebue, Dillingham, Kodiak, and other larger communities as well as to major Southeast and Alaska Peninsula communities.

The bulk of remaining commercial flight offerings come from small regional commuter airlines such as Ravn Alaska, PenAir, and Frontier Flying Service. The smallest towns and villages must rely on scheduled or chartered bush flying services using general aviation aircraft such as the Cessna Caravan, the most popular aircraft in use in the state. Much of this service can be attributed to the Alaska bypass mail program which subsidizes bulk mail delivery to Alaskan rural communities. The program requires 70% of that subsidy to go to carriers who offer passenger service to the communities.

Many communities have small air taxi services. These operations originated from the demand for customized transport to remote areas. Perhaps the most quintessentially Alaskan plane is the bush seaplane. The world's busiest seaplane base is Lake Hood, located next to Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport, where flights bound for remote villages without an airstrip carry passengers, cargo, and many items from stores and warehouse clubs.

In 2006, Alaska had the highest number of pilots per capita of any U.S. state.[139] In Alaska there are 8,795 active pilot certificates as of 2020. [140] Of these, there are 2,507 Private, 1,496 Commercial, 2,180 Airline Transport, and 2,239 student pilots. There are also 3,987 pilots with an Instrument rating and 1,511 Flight Instructors.

Other transport

Another Alaskan transportation method is the dogsled. In modern times (that is, any time after the mid-late 1920s), dog mushing is more of a sport than a true means of transportation. Various races are held around the state, but the best known is the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, a 1,150-mile (1,850 km) trail from Anchorage to Nome (although the distance varies from year to year, the official distance is set at 1,049 miles or 1,688 km). The race commemorates the famous 1925 serum run to Nome in which mushers and dogs like Togo and Balto took much-needed medicine to the diphtheria-stricken community of Nome when all other means of transportation had failed. Mushers from all over the world come to Anchorage each March to compete for cash, prizes, and prestige. The "Serum Run" is another sled dog race that more accurately follows the route of the famous 1925 relay, leaving from the community of Nenana (southwest of Fairbanks) to Nome.[141]

In areas not served by road or rail, primary transportation in summer is by all-terrain vehicle and in winter by snowmobile or "snow machine", as it is commonly referred to in Alaska.[142]

Data transport

Alaska's internet and other data transport systems are provided largely through the two major telecommunications companies: GCI and Alaska Communications. GCI owns and operates what it calls the Alaska United Fiber Optic system[143] and, as of late 2011, Alaska Communications advertised that it has "two fiber optic paths to the lower 48 and two more across Alaska.[144] In January 2011, it was reported that a $1 billion project to connect Asia and rural Alaska was being planned, aided in part by $350 million in stimulus from the federal government.[145]

Law and government

State government

 
The center of state government in Juneau. The large buildings in the background are, from left to right: the Court Plaza Building (known colloquially as the "Spam Can"), the State Office Building (behind), the Alaska Office Building, the John H. Dimond State Courthouse, and the Alaska State Capitol. Many of the smaller buildings in the foreground are also occupied by state government agencies.

Like all other U.S. states, Alaska is governed as a republic, with three branches of government: an executive branch consisting of the governor of Alaska and their appointees which head executive departments; a legislative branch consisting of the Alaska House of Representatives and Alaska Senate; and a judicial branch consisting of the Alaska Supreme Court and lower courts.

The state of Alaska employs approximately 16,000 people statewide.[146]

The Alaska Legislature consists of a 40-member House of Representatives and a 20-member Senate. Senators serve four-year terms and House members two. The governor of Alaska serves four-year terms. The lieutenant governor runs separately from the governor in the primaries, but during the general election, the nominee for governor and nominee for lieutenant governor run together on the same ticket.

Alaska's court system has four levels: the Alaska Supreme Court, the Alaska Court of Appeals, the superior courts and the district courts.[147] The superior and district courts are trial courts. Superior courts are courts of general jurisdiction, while district courts hear only certain types of cases, including misdemeanor criminal cases and civil cases valued up to $100,000.[147]

The Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals are appellate courts. The Court of Appeals is required to hear appeals from certain lower-court decisions, including those regarding criminal prosecutions, juvenile delinquency, and habeas corpus.[147] The Supreme Court hears civil appeals and may in its discretion hear criminal appeals.[147]

State politics

Gubernatorial election results[148]
Year Democratic Republican Others
1958 59.6% 29,189 39.4% 19,299
1962 52.3% 29,627 47.7% 27,054
1966 48.4% 32,065 50.0% 33,145
1970 52.4% 42,309 46.1% 37,264
1974 47.4% 45,553 47.7% 45,840
1978 20.2% 25,656 39.1% 49,580
1982 46.1% 89,918 37.1% 72,291
1986 47.3% 84,943 42.6% 76,515
1990 30.9% 60,201 26.2% 50,991 38.9% 75,721[a]
1994 41.1% 87,693 40.8% 87,157
1998 51.3% 112,879 17.9% 39,331
2002 40.7% 94,216 55.9% 129,279
2006 41.0% 97,238 48.3% 114,697
2010 37.7% 96,519 59.1% 151,318
2014 0.0% 0 45.9% 128,435 48.1% 134,658[b]
2018 44.4% 125,739 51.4% 145,631
2022 24.2% 63,755 50.3% 132,392

Although in its early years of statehood Alaska was a Democratic state, since the early 1970s it has been characterized as Republican-leaning.[149] Local political communities have often worked on issues related to land use development, fishing, tourism, and individual rights. Alaska Natives, while organized in and around their communities, have been active within the Native corporations. These have been given ownership over large tracts of land, which require stewardship.

Alaska was formerly the only state in which possession of one ounce or less of marijuana in one's home was completely legal under state law, though the federal law remains in force.[150]

The state has an independence movement favoring a vote on secession from the United States, with the Alaskan Independence Party.[151]

Six Republicans and four Democrats have served as governor of Alaska. In addition, Republican governor Wally Hickel was elected to the office for a second term in 1990 after leaving the Republican party and briefly joining the Alaskan Independence Party ticket just long enough to be reelected. He officially rejoined the Republican party in 1994.

Alaska's voter initiative making marijuana legal took effect on February 24, 2015, placing Alaska alongside Colorado and Washington as the first three U.S. states where recreational marijuana is legal. The new law means people over 21 can consume small amounts of cannabis.[152] The first legal marijuana store opened in Valdez in October 2016.[153]

Voter registration

Party registration as of November 2022[154]
Party Total voters Percentage
Unaffiliated 349,661 58.04%
Republican 144,542 23.99%
Democratic 77,137 12.80%
Alaskan Independence 19,277 3.20%
Other political groups 11,803 1.97%
Total 602,420 100%

Taxes

To finance state government operations, Alaska depends primarily on petroleum revenues and federal subsidies. This allows it to have the lowest individual tax burden in the United States.[155] It is one of five states with no sales tax, one of seven states with no individual income tax, and—along with New Hampshire—one of two that has neither.[156] The Department of Revenue Tax Division[157] reports regularly on the state's revenue sources. The department also issues an annual summary of its operations, including new state laws that directly affect the tax division. In 2014, the Tax Foundation ranked Alaska as having the fourth most "business friendly" tax policy, behind only Wyoming, South Dakota, and Nevada.[158]

While Alaska has no state sales tax, 89 municipalities collect a local sales tax, from 1.0 to 7.5%, typically 3–5%. Other local taxes levied include raw fish taxes, hotel, motel, and bed-and-breakfast 'bed' taxes, severance taxes, liquor and tobacco taxes, gaming (pull tabs) taxes, tire taxes and fuel transfer taxes. A part of the revenue collected from certain state taxes and license fees (such as petroleum, aviation motor fuel, telephone cooperative) is shared with municipalities in Alaska.

The fall in oil prices after the fracking boom in the early 2010s has decimated Alaska's state treasury, which has historically received about 85 percent of its revenue from taxes and fees imposed on oil and gas companies.[159] The state government has had to drastically reduce its budget, and has brought its budget shortfall from over $2 billion in 2016 to under $500 million by 2018. In 2020, Alaska's state government budget was $4.8 billion, while projected government revenues were only $4.5 billion.[160]

Federal politics

 
A line graph showing the presidential vote by party from 1960 to 2016 in Alaska

Alaska regularly supports Republicans in presidential elections and has done so since statehood. Republicans have won the state's electoral college votes in all but one election that it has participated in (1964). No state has voted for a Democratic presidential candidate fewer times. Alaska was carried by Democratic nominee Lyndon B. Johnson during his landslide election in 1964, while the 1960 and 1968 elections were close. Since 1972, however, Republicans have carried the state by large margins. In 2008, Republican John McCain defeated Democrat Barack Obama in Alaska, 59.49% to 37.83%. McCain's running mate was Sarah Palin, the state's governor and the first Alaskan on a major party ticket. Obama lost Alaska again in 2012, but he captured 40% of the state's vote in that election, making him the first Democrat to do so since 1968. In 2020, Joe Biden received 42.77% of the vote for president, marking the high point for a Democratic presidential candidate since Johnson's 1964 victory.

The Alaska Bush, central Juneau, midtown and downtown Anchorage, and the areas surrounding the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus and Ester have been strongholds of the Democratic Party. The Matanuska-Susitna Borough, the majority of Fairbanks (including North Pole and the military base), and South Anchorage typically have the strongest Republican showing.

Elections

Alaska has had a long history of primary defeats for incumbent U.S. Senators, with Ernest Gruening, Mike Gravel and Lisa Murkowski all being defeated for the nomination to their re-election. However, Murkowski won re-election with a write-in campaign. Despite this, Alaska has had some long-serving congressmen, with Ted Stevens serving as U.S. Senator for 40 years, and Don Young serving as the at-large representative for 49 years.

 
Republican Don Young held Alaska's sole U.S. House seat for 49 years, from 1973 to 2022.

In a 2020 study, Alaska was ranked as the 15th hardest state for citizens to vote in.[161]

In the 2020 election cycle, Alaskan voters approved Ballot Measure 2.[162] The measure passed by a margin of 1.1%, or about 4,000 votes.[163] The measure requires campaigns to disclose the original source and any intermediaries for campaign contributions over $2,000. The measure also establishes non-partisan blanket primaries for statewide elections (like in Washington state and California) and ranked-choice voting (like in Maine).[163] Measure 2 makes Alaska the third state with jungle primaries for all statewide races, the second state with ranked choice voting, and the only state with both.

The first race to use the new system of elections was the 2022 special election to fill Alaska's only U.S. House seat, left vacant by the death of Don Young, won by Mary Peltola, the first Democrat to win the House seat since 1972, and the first Alaskan Native to be elected to the United States Congress in history.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Wally Hickel would rejoin the Republican party after winning the election as a member of the Alaskan Independence Party.
  2. ^ Byron Mallott, the Democratic gubernatorial nominee, suspended his campaign and became the running mate of Bill Walker, an independent who left the Republican Party. They won the election with 48.1% or 134,658 votes.
  1. ^ now known as Utqiaġvik

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External links

  • Alaska at Curlie
  • Alaska's Digital Archives
  • The short film Alaska (1967) is available for free download at the Internet Archive.
  •   Geographic data related to Alaska at OpenStreetMap
  • (map)
  • Carl J. Sacarlasen Diary Extracts at Dartmouth College Library
  • M.E. Diemer Alaska Photographs at Dartmouth College Library
  • Alfred Hulse Brooks Photographs and Papers. Yale Collection of Western Americana, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.

U.S. federal government

  • Alaska State Guide from the Library of Congress
  • Energy & Environmental Data for Alaska
  • USGS real-time, geographic, and other scientific resources of Alaska December 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • Alaska State Facts
  • Alaska Statehood Subject Guide from the Eisenhower Presidential Library November 13, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
  • Alaska Statehood documents, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library July 21, 2017, at the Wayback Machine

Alaska state government

  • State of Alaska website
Preceded by List of U.S. states by date of admission to the Union
Admitted on January 3, 1959 (49th)
Succeeded by
Hawaii

Coordinates: 64°N 152°W / 64°N 152°W / 64; -152 (State of Alaska)

alaska, this, article, about, state, other, uses, disambiguation, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, listen, state, northwest, extremity, north, america, semi, exclave, borders, british, columbia, yukon, canada, east, shares, western, maritime, bord. This article is about the U S state For other uses see Alaska disambiguation Alaskan redirects here For other uses see Alaskan disambiguation Alaska e ˈ l ae s k e listen e LAS ke is a U S state on the northwest extremity of North America A semi exclave of the U S it borders British Columbia and the Yukon in Canada to the east and shares a western maritime border in the Bering Strait with the Russian Federation s Chukotka Autonomous Okrug To the north are the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas of the Arctic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean lies to the south and southwest Alaska Alax sxax Aleut Alaaskaq Inupiaq Alaskaq Central Yupik Anaaski Tlingit Alas kaaq Alutiiq Alyaska code rus promoted to code ru Russian StateState of AlaskaFlagSealNickname The Last FrontierMotto North to the FutureAnthem Alaska s FlagMap of the United States with Alaska highlightedCountryUnited StatesBefore statehoodTerritory of AlaskaAdmitted to the UnionJanuary 3 1959 64 years ago 1959 01 03 49th CapitalJuneauLargest cityAnchorageLargest metro and urban areasAnchorageGovernment GovernorMike Dunleavy R Lieutenant GovernorNancy Dahlstrom R LegislatureAlaska Legislature Upper houseSenate Lower houseHouse of RepresentativesJudiciaryAlaska Supreme CourtU S senatorsLisa Murkowski R Dan Sullivan R U S House delegationMary Peltola D list Area Total663 268 sq mi 1 717 856 km2 Land571 951 sq mi 1 481 346 km2 Water91 316 sq mi 236 507 km2 13 77 Rank1stDimensions Length1 420 mi 2 285 km Width2 261 mi 3 639 km Elevation1 900 ft 580 m Highest elevation Denali 1 20 310 ft 6 190 5 m Lowest elevation0 ft 0 m Population 2020 3 Total736 081 Rank48th Density1 26 sq mi 0 49 km2 Rank50th Median household income 77 800 2 Income rank12thDemonymAlaskanLanguage Official languagesAhtna Alutiiq Dena ina Deg Xinag English Eyak Gwich in Haida Han Holikachuk Inupiaq Koyukon Lower Tanana St Lawrence Island Yupik Tanacross Tlingit Tsimshian Unangax Upper Kuskokwim Upper Tanana Yup ik Spoken languageEnglish 86 3 Alaska Native languages 5 2 Tagalog 3 4 Spanish 2 9 Others 2 2 Time zoneseast of 169 30 UTC 09 00 Alaska Summer DST UTC 08 00 ADT west of 169 30 UTC 10 00 Hawaii Aleutian Summer DST UTC 09 00 HADT USPS abbreviationAKISO 3166 codeUS AKLatitude51 20 N to 71 50 NLongitude130 W to 172 EWebsitealaska wbr govAlaska state symbolsFlag of AlaskaLiving insigniaBirdWillow ptarmiganDog breedAlaskan MalamuteFishKing salmonFlowerForget me notInsectFour spot skimmer dragonflyMammalLand MooseMarine Bowhead whaleTreeSitka SpruceInanimate insigniaFossilWoolly MammothGemstoneJadeMineralGoldOtherDog mushing state sport State route markerState quarterReleased in 2008Lists of United States state symbolsInteractive map showing border of Alaska click to zoom Alaska is the largest U S state by area comprising more total area than the next three largest states of Texas California and Montana combined and is the seventh largest subnational division in the world It is the third least populous and most sparsely populated U S state and the continent s most populous territory located mostly north of the 60th parallel with a population of 736 081 as of 2020 more than quadruple the combined populations of Northern Canada and Greenland 3 The state capital of Juneau is the second largest city in the United States by area and the former capital of Alaska Sitka is the largest U S city by area Approximately half of Alaska s residents live within the Anchorage metropolitan area Indigenous people have lived in Alaska for thousands of years and it is widely believed that the region served as the entry point for the initial settlement of North America by way of the Bering land bridge The Russian Empire was the first to actively colonize the area beginning in the 18th century eventually establishing Russian America which spanned most of the current state The expense and logistical difficulty of maintaining this distant possession prompted its sale to the U S in 1867 for US 7 2 million equivalent to 140 million in 2021 The area went through several administrative changes before becoming organized as a territory on May 11 1912 It was admitted as the 49th state of the U S on January 3 1959 4 Abundant natural resources have enabled Alaska with one of the smallest state economies to have one of the highest per capita incomes with commercial fishing and the extraction of natural gas and oil dominating Alaska s economy U S Armed Forces bases and tourism also contribute to the economy more than half the state is federally owned land containing national forests national parks and wildlife refuges The Indigenous population of Alaska is proportionally the highest of any U S state at over 15 percent 5 Various Indigenous languages are spoken and Alaskan Natives are influencial in local and state politics Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Pre colonization 2 2 Colonization 2 3 Alaska as an incorporated U S territory 2 4 Statehood 2 5 Good Friday earthquake 2 6 Alaska oil boom 2 7 COVID 19 pandemic 3 Geography 3 1 Regions 3 1 1 South Central 3 1 2 Southeast 3 1 3 Interior 3 1 4 Southwest 3 1 5 North Slope 3 1 6 Aleutian Islands 3 2 Land ownership 3 3 Alaska Heritage Resources Survey 3 4 Cities towns and boroughs 3 4 1 Cities and census designated places by population 3 5 Climate 4 Demographics 4 1 Race and ethnicity 4 2 Languages 4 3 Religion 5 Economy 5 1 Energy 5 1 1 Permanent Fund 5 2 Cost of living 5 3 Agriculture and fishing 6 Culture 6 1 Music 6 2 Alaska in film television videogames 6 3 Sports 7 Public health and public safety 8 Education 9 Transportation 9 1 Roads 9 2 Rail 9 3 Marine transport 9 4 Air transport 9 5 Other transport 9 6 Data transport 10 Law and government 10 1 State government 10 2 State politics 10 3 Voter registration 10 4 Taxes 10 5 Federal politics 10 6 Elections 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 External links 14 1 U S federal government 14 2 Alaska state governmentEtymology EditThe name Alaska Russian Alya ska tr Alyaska was introduced in the Russian colonial period when it was used to refer to the Alaska Peninsula It was derived from an Aleut language idiom alaxsxaq meaning the mainland or more literally the object towards which the action of the sea is directed 6 7 8 It is also known as Alyeska the great land an Aleut word that was derived from the same root History EditMain articles Prehistory of Alaska and History of Alaska Pre colonization Edit Main article Alaska Natives A modern Alutiiq dancer in traditional festival garb Numerous indigenous peoples occupied Alaska for thousands of years before the arrival of European peoples to the area Linguistic and DNA studies done here have provided evidence for the settlement of North America by way of the Bering land bridge 9 At the Upward Sun River site in the Tanana Valley in Alaska remains of a six week old infant were found The baby s DNA showed that she belonged to a population that was genetically separate from other native groups present elsewhere in the New World at the end of the Pleistocene Ben Potter the University of Alaska Fairbanks archaeologist who unearthed the remains at the Upward Sun River site in 2013 named this new group Ancient Beringians 10 The Tlingit people developed a society with a matrilineal kinship system of property inheritance and descent in what is today Southeast Alaska along with parts of British Columbia and the Yukon Also in Southeast were the Haida now well known for their unique arts The Tsimshian people came to Alaska from British Columbia in 1887 when President Grover Cleveland and later the U S Congress granted them permission to settle on Annette Island and found the town of Metlakatla All three of these peoples as well as other indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast experienced smallpox outbreaks from the late 18th through the mid 19th century with the most devastating epidemics occurring in the 1830s and 1860s resulting in high fatalities and social disruption 11 The Aleutian Islands are still home to the Aleut people s seafaring society although they were the first Native Alaskans to be exploited by the Russians Western and Southwestern Alaska are home to the Yup ik while their cousins the Alutiiq Sugpiaq live in what is now Southcentral Alaska The Gwich in people of the northern Interior region are Athabaskan and primarily known today for their dependence on the caribou within the much contested Arctic National Wildlife Refuge The North Slope and Little Diomede Island are occupied by the widespread Inupiat people Colonization Edit Main articles Russian America Department of Alaska District of Alaska Fairbanks Gold Rush Kobuk River Stampede and Nome Gold Rush The Russian settlement of St Paul s Harbor present day Kodiak town Kodiak Island 1814 Miners and prospectors climb the Chilkoot Trail during the 1898 Klondike Gold Rush Some researchers believe the first Russian settlement in Alaska was established in the 17th century 12 According to this hypothesis in 1648 several koches of Semyon Dezhnyov s expedition came ashore in Alaska by storm and founded this settlement This hypothesis is based on the testimony of Chukchi geographer Nikolai Daurkin who had visited Alaska in 1764 1765 and who had reported on a village on the Kheuveren River populated by bearded men who pray to the icons Some modern researchers associate Kheuveren with Koyuk River 13 The first European vessel to reach Alaska is generally held to be the St Gabriel under the authority of the surveyor M S Gvozdev and assistant navigator I Fyodorov on August 21 1732 during an expedition of Siberian Cossack A F Shestakov and Russian explorer Dmitry Pavlutsky 1729 1735 14 Another European contact with Alaska occurred in 1741 when Vitus Bering led an expedition for the Russian Navy aboard the St Peter After his crew returned to Russia with sea otter pelts judged to be the finest fur in the world small associations of fur traders began to sail from the shores of Siberia toward the Aleutian Islands The first permanent European settlement was founded in 1784 Between 1774 and 1800 Spain sent several expeditions to Alaska to assert its claim over the Pacific Northwest In 1789 a Spanish settlement and fort were built in Nootka Sound These expeditions gave names to places such as Valdez Bucareli Sound and Cordova Later the Russian American Company carried out an expanded colonization program during the early to mid 19th century Sitka renamed New Archangel from 1804 to 1867 on Baranof Island in the Alexander Archipelago in what is now Southeast Alaska became the capital of Russian America It remained the capital after the colony was transferred to the United States The Russians never fully colonized Alaska and the colony was never very profitable Evidence of Russian settlement in names and churches survive throughout southeastern Alaska William H Seward the 24th United States Secretary of State negotiated the Alaska Purchase also known as Seward s Folly with the Russians in 1867 for 7 2 million Russia s contemporary ruler Tsar Alexander II the Emperor of the Russian Empire King of Poland and Grand Duke of Finland also planned the sale 15 the purchase was made on March 30 1867 Six months later the commissioners arrived in Sitka and the formal transfer was arranged the formal flag raising took place at Fort Sitka on October 18 1867 In the ceremony 250 uniformed U S soldiers marched to the governor s house at Castle Hill where the Russian troops lowered the Russian flag and the U S flag was raised This event is celebrated as Alaska Day a legal holiday on October 18 Alaska was loosely governed by the military initially and was administered as a district starting in 1884 with a governor appointed by the United States president A federal district court was headquartered in Sitka For most of Alaska s first decade under the United States flag Sitka was the only community inhabited by American settlers They organized a provisional city government which was Alaska s first municipal government but not in a legal sense 16 Legislation allowing Alaskan communities to legally incorporate as cities did not come about until 1900 and home rule for cities was extremely limited or unavailable until statehood took effect in 1959 Alaska as an incorporated U S territory Edit Main articles Organic act List of organic acts and Territory of Alaska Starting in the 1890s and stretching in some places to the early 1910s gold rushes in Alaska and the nearby Yukon Territory brought thousands of miners and settlers to Alaska Alaska was officially incorporated as an organized territory in 1912 Alaska s capital which had been in Sitka until 1906 was moved north to Juneau Construction of the Alaska Governor s Mansion began that same year European immigrants from Norway and Sweden also settled in southeast Alaska where they entered the fishing and logging industries U S troops navigate snow and ice during the Battle of Attu in May 1943 During World War II the Aleutian Islands Campaign focused on Attu Agattu and Kiska all of which were occupied by the Empire of Japan 17 During the Japanese occupation a white American civilian and two United States Navy personnel were killed at Attu and Kiska respectively and nearly a total of 50 Aleut civilians and eight sailors were interned in Japan About half of the Aleuts died during the period of internment 18 Unalaska Dutch Harbor and Adak became significant bases for the United States Army United States Army Air Forces and United States Navy The United States Lend Lease program involved flying American warplanes through Canada to Fairbanks and then Nome Soviet pilots took possession of these aircraft ferrying them to fight the German invasion of the Soviet Union The construction of military bases contributed to the population growth of some Alaskan cities Statehood Edit See also Alaska Statehood Act Admission to the Union and List of U S states by date of admission to the Union Bob Bartlett and Ernest Gruening Alaska s inaugural U S Senators hold the 49 star U S Flag after the admission of Alaska as the 49th state Statehood for Alaska was an important cause of James Wickersham early in his tenure as a congressional delegate Decades later the statehood movement gained its first real momentum following a territorial referendum in 1946 The Alaska Statehood Committee and Alaska s Constitutional Convention would soon follow Statehood supporters also found themselves fighting major battles against political foes mostly in the U S Congress but also within Alaska Statehood was approved by the U S Congress on July 7 1958 Alaska was officially proclaimed a state on January 3 1959 Good Friday earthquake Edit Main article 1964 Alaska earthquake On March 27 1964 the massive Good Friday earthquake killed 133 people and destroyed several villages and portions of large coastal communities mainly by the resultant tsunamis and landslides It was the second most powerful earthquake in recorded history with a moment magnitude of 9 2 more than a thousand times as powerful as the 1989 San Francisco earthquake 19 The time of day 5 36 pm time of year spring and location of the epicenter were all cited as factors in potentially sparing thousands of lives particularly in Anchorage Lasting four minutes and thirty eight seconds the magnitude 9 2 megathrust earthquake remains the most powerful earthquake recorded in North American history and the second most powerful earthquake recorded in world history Six hundred miles 970 km of fault ruptured at once and moved up to 60 ft 18 m releasing about 500 years of stress buildup Soil liquefaction fissures landslides and other ground failures caused major structural damage in several communities and much damage to property Anchorage sustained great destruction or damage to many inadequately earthquake engineered houses buildings and infrastructure paved streets sidewalks water and sewer mains electrical systems and other man made equipment particularly in the several landslide zones along Knik Arm Two hundred miles 320 km southwest some areas near Kodiak were permanently raised by 30 feet 9 m Southeast of Anchorage areas around the head of Turnagain Arm near Girdwood and Portage dropped as much as 8 feet 2 4 m requiring reconstruction and fill to raise the Seward Highway above the new high tide mark In Prince William Sound Port Valdez suffered a massive underwater landslide resulting in the deaths of 32 people between the collapse of the Valdez city harbor and docks and inside the ship that was docked there at the time Nearby a 27 foot 8 2 m tsunami destroyed the village of Chenega killing 23 of the 68 people who lived there survivors out ran the wave climbing to high ground Post quake tsunamis severely affected Whittier Seward Kodiak and other Alaskan communities as well as people and property in British Columbia Washington Oregon and California 20 Tsunamis also caused damage in Hawaii and Japan Evidence of motion directly related to the earthquake was also reported from Florida and Texas There were hundreds of aftershocks in the first weeks following the main shock In the first day alone eleven major aftershocks were recorded with a magnitude greater than 6 0 Nine more struck over the next three weeks In all thousands of aftershocks occurred in the months following the quake and smaller aftershocks continued to strike the region for more than a year 21 Alaska oil boom Edit The 1968 discovery of oil at Prudhoe Bay and the 1977 completion of the Trans Alaska Pipeline System led to an oil boom Royalty revenues from oil have funded large state budgets from 1980 onward Oil production was not the only economic value of Alaska s land however In the second half of the 20th century Alaska discovered tourism as an important source of revenue Tourism became popular after World War II when military personnel stationed in the region returned home praising its natural splendor The Alcan Highway built during the war and the Alaska Marine Highway System completed in 1963 made the state more accessible than before Tourism became increasingly important in Alaska and today over 1 4 million people visit the state each year 22 With tourism more vital to the economy environmentalism also rose in importance The Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act ANILCA of 1980 added 53 7 million acres 217 000 km to the National Wildlife Refuge system parts of 25 rivers to the National Wild and Scenic Rivers system 3 3 million acres 13 000 km to National Forest lands and 43 6 million acres 176 000 km to National Park land Because of the Act Alaska now contains two thirds of all American national parklands Today more than half of Alaskan land is owned by the Federal Government 23 In 1989 the Exxon Valdez hit a reef in the Prince William Sound spilling more than 11 million U S gallons 42 megaliters of crude oil over 1 100 miles 1 800 km of coastline Today the battle between philosophies of development and conservation is seen in the contentious debate over oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the proposed Pebble Mine Oil pooled on rocks on the shore of Prince William Sound after the oil spill COVID 19 pandemic Edit The COVID 19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached the U S state of Alaska on March 12 2020 24 On March 11 Governor Mike Dunleavy s office declared a state of emergency to ensure all entities have the necessary response resources 25 The next day the first case a foreign national in Anchorage was announced to the public 26 Ketchikan one of the places affected by COVID 19 during the 2020 outbreak in Alaska On March 21 2020 Ketchikan a small coastal town of approximately 8 000 residents located in Southeast Alaska was determined to have a cluster of six COVID 19 cases The town sheltered in place for the following 14 days 27 On March 24 2020 three more cases of COVID 19 were found in Ketchikan bringing the total there to nine 28 The next day the total cases there reached 11 29 On April 1 2020 the number of positive cases of COVID 19 in Ketchikan rose to 14 30 Geography EditMain article Geography of Alaska Located at the northwest corner of North America Alaska is the northernmost and westernmost state in the United States but also has the most easterly longitude in the United States because the Aleutian Islands extend into the Eastern Hemisphere 31 Alaska is the only non contiguous U S state on continental North America about 500 miles 800 km of British Columbia Canada separates Alaska from Washington It is technically part of the continental U S but is sometimes not included in colloquial use Alaska is not part of the contiguous U S often called the Lower 48 The capital city Juneau is situated on the mainland of the North American continent but is not connected by road to the rest of the North American highway system The state is bordered by Canada s Yukon and British Columbia to the east making it the only state to only border a Canadian territory the Gulf of Alaska and the Pacific Ocean to the south and southwest the Bering Sea Bering Strait and Chukchi Sea to the west and the Arctic Ocean to the north Alaska s territorial waters touch Russia s territorial waters in the Bering Strait as the Russian Big Diomede Island and Alaskan Little Diomede Island are only 3 miles 4 8 km apart Alaska has a longer coastline than all the other U S states combined 32 Alaska s size compared with the 48 contiguous states Albers equal area conic projection At 663 268 square miles 1 717 856 km2 in total area Alaska is by far the largest state in the United States Alaska is more than twice the size of the second largest U S state Texas and it is larger than the next three largest states Texas California and Montana combined Alaska is the seventh largest subnational division in the world If it was an independent nation would be the 16th largest country in the world larger than Iran With its myriad islands Alaska has nearly 34 000 miles 55 000 km of tidal shoreline The Aleutian Islands chain extends west from the southern tip of the Alaska Peninsula Many active volcanoes are found in the Aleutians and in coastal regions Unimak Island for example is home to Mount Shishaldin which is an occasionally smoldering volcano that rises to 10 000 feet 3 000 m above the North Pacific The chain of volcanoes extends to Mount Spurr west of Anchorage on the mainland Geologists have identified Alaska as part of Wrangellia a large region consisting of multiple states and Canadian provinces in the Pacific Northwest which is actively undergoing continent building One of the world s largest tides occurs in Turnagain Arm just south of Anchorage where tidal differences can be more than 35 feet 10 7 m 33 Alaska has more than three million lakes 34 Marshlands and wetland permafrost cover 188 320 square miles 487 700 km2 mostly in northern western and southwest flatlands Glacier ice covers about 28 957 square miles 75 000 km2 of Alaska 35 The Bering Glacier is the largest glacier in North America covering 2 008 square miles 5 200 km2 alone 36 Regions Edit There are no officially defined borders demarcating the various regions of Alaska but there are six widely accepted regions South Central Edit Main article South Central Alaska The most populous region of Alaska containing Anchorage the Matanuska Susitna Valley and the Kenai Peninsula Rural mostly unpopulated areas south of the Alaska Range and west of the Wrangell Mountains also fall within the definition of South Central as do the Prince William Sound area and the communities of Cordova and Valdez 37 Southeast Edit Main article Southeast Alaska Also referred to as the Panhandle or Inside Passage this is the region of Alaska closest to the contiguous states As such this was where most of the initial non indigenous settlement occurred in the years following the Alaska Purchase The region is dominated by the Alexander Archipelago as well as the Tongass National Forest the largest national forest in the United States It contains the state capital Juneau the former capital Sitka and Ketchikan at one time Alaska s largest city 38 The Alaska Marine Highway provides a vital surface transportation link throughout the area and country as only three communities Haines Hyder and Skagway enjoy direct connections to the contiguous North American road system 39 Interior Edit Main article Alaska Interior Denali is the highest peak in North America The Interior is the largest region of Alaska much of it is uninhabited wilderness Fairbanks is the only large city in the region Denali National Park and Preserve is located here Denali formerly Mount McKinley is the highest mountain in North America and is also located here Southwest Edit Main article Southwest AlaskaSouthwest Alaska is a sparsely inhabited region stretching some 500 miles 800 km inland from the Bering Sea Most of the population lives along the coast Kodiak Island is also located in Southwest The massive Yukon Kuskokwim Delta one of the largest river deltas in the world is here Portions of the Alaska Peninsula are considered part of Southwest with the remaining portions included with the Aleutian Islands see below North Slope Edit Main article Alaska North Slope The North Slope is mostly tundra peppered with small villages The area is known for its massive reserves of crude oil and contains both the National Petroleum Reserve Alaska and the Prudhoe Bay Oil Field 40 The city of Utqiaġvik formerly known as Barrow is the northernmost city in the United States and is located here The Northwest Arctic area anchored by Kotzebue and also containing the Kobuk River valley is often regarded as being part of this region However the respective Inupiat of the North Slope and of the Northwest Arctic seldom consider themselves to be one people 41 Aleutian Islands Edit Main article Aleutian Islands Although entirely east of the International Date Line the triangular kink in the line was agreed upon the US acquisition of Alaska the Aleutian Islands cross the 180th meridian such that they contain both the westernmost Amatignak and the easternmost Semisopochnoi points in the United States More than 300 small volcanic islands make up this chain which stretches more than 1 200 miles 1 900 km into the Pacific Ocean Some of these islands fall in the Eastern Hemisphere but the International Date Line was drawn west of 180 to keep the whole state and thus the entire North American continent within the same legal day Two of the islands Attu and Kiska were occupied by Japanese forces during World War II Land ownership Edit According to an October 1998 report by the United States Bureau of Land Management approximately 65 of Alaska is owned and managed by the U S federal government as public lands including a multitude of national forests national parks and national wildlife refuges 42 Of these the Bureau of Land Management manages 87 million acres 35 million hectares or 23 8 of the state The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is managed by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service It is the world s largest wildlife refuge comprising 16 million acres 6 5 million hectares Of the remaining land area the state of Alaska owns 101 million acres 41 million hectares its entitlement under the Alaska Statehood Act A portion of that acreage is occasionally ceded to the organized boroughs presented above under the statutory provisions pertaining to newly formed boroughs Smaller portions are set aside for rural subdivisions and other homesteading related opportunities These are not very popular due to the often remote and roadless locations The University of Alaska as a land grant university also owns substantial acreage which it manages independently Another 44 million acres 18 million hectares are owned by 12 regional and scores of local Native corporations created under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act ANCSA of 1971 Regional Native corporation Doyon Limited often promotes itself as the largest private landowner in Alaska in advertisements and other communications Provisions of ANCSA allowing the corporations land holdings to be sold on the open market starting in 1991 were repealed before they could take effect Effectively the corporations hold title including subsurface title in many cases a privilege denied to individual Alaskans but cannot sell the land Individual Native allotments can be and are sold on the open market however Various private interests own the remaining land totaling about one percent of the state Alaska is by a large margin the state with the smallest percentage of private land ownership when Native corporation holdings are excluded Alaska Heritage Resources Survey Edit The Alaska Heritage Resources Survey AHRS is a restricted inventory of all reported historic and prehistoric sites within the U S state of Alaska it is maintained by the Office of History and Archaeology The survey s inventory of cultural resources includes objects structures buildings sites districts and travel ways with a general provision that they are more than fifty years old As of 31 January 2012 update more than 35 000 sites have been reported 43 Cities towns and boroughs Edit See also List of cities in Alaska by population Alaska locations by per capita income and List of boroughs and census areas in Alaska Anchorage Alaska s largest city Fairbanks Alaska s second largest city and by a significant margin the largest city in Alaska s interior Juneau Alaska s third largest city and its capital Bethel the largest city in the Unorganized Borough and in rural Alaska Homer showing from bottom to top the edge of downtown its airport and the Spit Utqiaġvik Browerville neighborhood near Eben Hopson Middle School shown known colloquially for many years by the nickname Top of the World is the northernmost city in the United States Cordova built in the early 20th century to support the Kennecott Mines and the Copper River and Northwestern Railway has persevered as a fishing community since their closure Main Street in Talkeetna Alaska is not divided into counties as most of the other U S states but it is divided into boroughs 44 Delegates to the Alaska Constitutional Convention wanted to avoid the pitfalls of the traditional county system and adopted their own unique model 45 Many of the more densely populated parts of the state are part of Alaska s 16 boroughs which function somewhat similarly to counties in other states However unlike county equivalents in the other 49 states the boroughs do not cover the entire land area of the state The area not part of any borough is referred to as the Unorganized Borough The Unorganized Borough has no government of its own but the U S Census Bureau in cooperation with the state divided the Unorganized Borough into 11 census areas solely for the purposes of statistical analysis and presentation A recording district is a mechanism for management of the public record in Alaska The state is divided into 34 recording districts which are centrally administered under a state recorder All recording districts use the same acceptance criteria fee schedule etc for accepting documents into the public record Whereas many U S states use a three tiered system of decentralization state county township most of Alaska uses only two tiers state borough Owing to the low population density most of the land is located in the Unorganized Borough As the name implies it has no intermediate borough government but is administered directly by the state government In 2000 57 71 of Alaska s area has this status with 13 05 of the population 46 Anchorage merged the city government with the Greater Anchorage Area Borough in 1975 to form the Municipality of Anchorage containing the city proper and the communities of Eagle River Chugiak Peters Creek Girdwood Bird and Indian Fairbanks has a separate borough the Fairbanks North Star Borough and municipality the City of Fairbanks The state s most populous city is Anchorage home to 291 247 people in 2020 47 The richest location in Alaska by per capita income is Denali 42 245 Yakutat City Sitka Juneau and Anchorage are the four largest cities in the U S by area Cities and census designated places by population Edit As reflected in the 2020 United States census Alaska has a total of 355 incorporated cities and census designated places CDPs 48 The tally of cities includes four unified municipalities essentially the equivalent of a consolidated city county The majority of these communities are located in the rural expanse of Alaska known as The Bush and are unconnected to that contiguous North American road network The table at the bottom of this section lists about the 100 largest cities and census designated places in Alaska in population order Of Alaska s 2020 U S census population figure of 733 391 16 655 people or 2 27 of the population did not live in an incorporated city or census designated place 47 Approximately three quarters of that figure were people who live in urban and suburban neighborhoods on the outskirts of the city limits of Ketchikan Kodiak Palmer and Wasilla CDPs have not been established for these areas by the United States Census Bureau except that seven CDPs were established for the Ketchikan area neighborhoods in the 1980 Census Clover Pass Herring Cove Ketchikan East Mountain Point North Tongass Highway Pennock Island and Saxman East but have not been used since The remaining population was scattered throughout Alaska both within organized boroughs and in the Unorganized Borough in largely remote areas No Community name Type 2020 Pop 47 1 Anchorage City 291 2472 Fairbanks City 32 5153 Juneau City 32 2554 Knik Fairview CDP 19 2975 Badger CDP 19 0316 College CDP 11 3327 North Lakes CDP 9 4508 Meadow Lakes CDP 9 1979 Wasilla City 9 05410 Tanaina CDP 8 81711 Kalifornsky CDP 8 48712 Sitka City 8 45813 Ketchikan City 8 19214 Kenai City 7 42415 Steele Creek CDP 6 43716 Bethel City 6 32517 Chena Ridge CDP 6 01518 Sterling CDP 5 91819 Palmer City 5 88820 Gateway CDP 5 74821 Kodiak City 5 58122 Homer City 5 52223 South Lakes CDP 5 22924 Fishhook CDP 5 04825 Utqiaġvik City 4 92726 Farmers Loop CDP 4 70427 Nikiski CDP 4 45628 Soldotna City 4 34229 Unalaska City 4 25430 Mill Bay CDP 4 21631 Valdez City 3 98532 Big Lake CDP 3 83333 Nome City 3 69934 Butte CDP 3 58935 Goldstream CDP 3 29936 Kotzebue City 3 10237 Petersburg City 3 04338 Farm Loop CDP 2 74739 Seward City 2 71740 Eielson AFB CDP 2 61041 Cordova City 2 60942 Ester CDP 2 41643 Deltana CDP 2 35944 Dillingham City 2 24945 Fritz Creek CDP 2 24846 North Pole City 2 24347 Willow CDP 2 19648 Ridgeway CDP 2 13649 Bear Creek CDP 2 12950 Wrangell City 2 127 No Community name Type 2020 Pop 51 Anchor Point CDP 2 10552 Houston City 1 97553 Point MacKenzie CDP 1 85254 Kodiak Station CDP 1 67355 Haines CDP 1 65756 Akutan City 1 58957 Susitna North CDP 1 56458 Lazy Mountain CDP 1 50659 Cohoe CDP 1 47160 Metlakatla CDP 1 45461 Hooper Bay City 1 37562 Diamond Ridge CDP 1 33063 Prudhoe Bay CDP 1 31064 Tok CDP 1 24365 Skagway CDP 1 16466 Funny River CDP 1 10367 Salamatof CDP 1 07868 Talkeetna CDP 1 05569 Sutton Alpine CDP 1 03870 Craig City 1 03671 Buffalo Soapstone CDP 1 02172 Salcha CDP 97773 Healy CDP 96674 Chevak City 95175 Hoonah City 93176 Delta Junction City 91877 Ninilchik CDP 84578 Savoonga City 83579 Point Hope City 83080 Emmonak City 82581 Togiak City 81782 Kwethluk City 81283 Selawik City 80984 Knik River CDP 79285 Quinhagak City 77686 Unalakleet City 76587 King Cove City 75788 Alakanuk City 75689 Womens Bay CDP 74390 Klawock City 72091 Happy Valley CDP 71392 Kipnuk CDP 70493 Noorvik City 69494 Akiachak CDP 67795 Toksook Bay City 65896 Yakutat CDP 65797 Gustavus CDP 655Kotlik CDP99 Two Rivers CDP 650100 Fox River CDP 644Climate Edit Main article Climate of Alaska Alaska has largest acreage of public land owned by the federal government than any other state 49 The climate in south and southeastern Alaska is a mid latitude oceanic climate Koppen climate classification Cfb and a subarctic oceanic climate Koppen Cfc in the northern parts On an annual basis the southeast is both the wettest and warmest part of Alaska with milder temperatures in the winter and high precipitation throughout the year Juneau averages over 50 in 130 cm of precipitation a year and Ketchikan averages over 150 in 380 cm 50 This is also the only region in Alaska in which the average daytime high temperature is above freezing during the winter months Koppen climate types of AlaskaThe climate of Anchorage and south central Alaska is mild by Alaskan standards due to the region s proximity to the seacoast While the area gets less rain than southeast Alaska it gets more snow and days tend to be clearer On average Anchorage receives 16 in 41 cm of precipitation a year with around 75 in 190 cm of snow although there are areas in the south central which receive far more snow It is a subarctic climate Koppen Dfc due to its brief cool summers The climate of western Alaska is determined in large part by the Bering Sea and the Gulf of Alaska It is a subarctic oceanic climate in the southwest and a continental subarctic climate farther north The temperature is somewhat moderate considering how far north the area is This region has a tremendous amount of variety in precipitation An area stretching from the northern side of the Seward Peninsula to the Kobuk River valley i e the region around Kotzebue Sound is technically a desert with portions receiving less than 10 in 25 cm of precipitation annually On the other extreme some locations between Dillingham and Bethel average around 100 in 250 cm of precipitation 51 The climate of the interior of Alaska is subarctic Some of the highest and lowest temperatures in Alaska occur around the area near Fairbanks The summers may have temperatures reaching into the 90s F the low to mid 30s C while in the winter the temperature can fall below 60 F 51 C Precipitation is sparse in the Interior often less than 10 in 25 cm a year but what precipitation falls in the winter tends to stay the entire winter The highest and lowest recorded temperatures in Alaska are both in the Interior The highest is 100 F 38 C in Fort Yukon which is just 8 mi or 13 km inside the arctic circle on June 27 1915 52 53 making Alaska tied with Hawaii as the state with the lowest high temperature in the United States 54 55 The lowest official Alaska temperature is 80 F 62 C in Prospect Creek on January 23 1971 52 53 one degree above the lowest temperature recorded in continental North America in Snag Yukon Canada 56 The climate in the extreme north of Alaska is Arctic Koppen ET with long very cold winters and short cool summers Even in July the average low temperature in Utqiaġvik is 34 F 1 C 57 Precipitation is light in this part of Alaska with many places averaging less than 10 in 25 cm per year mostly as snow which stays on the ground almost the entire year Average daily maximum and minimum temperatures for selected locations in Alaska 58 Location July F July C January F January C Anchorage 65 51 18 10 22 11 5 11Juneau 64 50 17 11 32 23 0 4Ketchikan 64 51 17 11 38 28 3 1Unalaska 57 46 14 8 36 28 2 2Fairbanks 72 53 22 11 1 17 17 27Fort Yukon 73 51 23 10 11 27 23 33Nome 58 46 14 8 13 2 10 19Utqiaġvik 47 34 08 1 7 19 21 28Demographics EditMain article Demographics of Alaska Historical populationCensus Pop 188033 426 189032 052 4 1 190063 59298 4 191064 3561 2 192055 036 14 5 193059 2787 7 194072 52422 3 1950128 64377 4 1960226 16775 8 1970300 38232 8 1980401 85133 8 1990550 04336 9 2000626 93214 0 2010710 23113 3 2020733 3913 3 1930 and 1940 censuses taken in preceding autumnSources 1910 2020 59 The United States Census Bureau found in the 2020 United States census that the population of Alaska was 736 081 on April 1 2020 a 3 6 increase since the 2010 United States census 3 According to the 2010 United States census the U S state of Alaska had a population of 710 231 increasing from 626 932 at the 2000 U S census In 2010 Alaska ranked as the 47th state by population ahead of North Dakota Vermont and Wyoming and Washington D C Estimates show North Dakota ahead as of 2018 update 60 Alaska is the least densely populated state and one of the most sparsely populated areas in the world at 1 2 inhabitants per square mile 0 46 km2 with the next state Wyoming at 5 8 inhabitants per square mile 2 2 km2 61 Alaska is by far the largest U S state by area and the tenth wealthiest per capita income 62 As of 2018 update due to its population size it is one of 14 U S states that still have only one telephone area code 63 Race and ethnicity Edit Alaska racial breakdown of population Racial composition 1970 64 1990 64 2000 65 2010 66 2020 67 White 78 8 75 5 69 3 66 7 59 4 Native 16 9 15 6 15 6 14 8 15 2 Asian 0 9 3 6 4 0 5 4 6 0 Black 3 0 4 1 3 5 3 3 3 0 Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander 0 5 1 0 1 7 Other race 0 4 1 2 1 6 1 6 2 5 Multiracial 5 5 7 3 12 2 Map of the largest racial ethnic group by borough Red indicates Native American blue indicates non Hispanic white and green indicates Asian Darker shades indicate a higher proportion of the population The 2019 American Community Survey estimated 60 2 of the population was non Hispanic white 3 7 black or African American 15 6 American Indian or Alaska Native 6 5 Asian 1 4 Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander 7 5 two or more races and 7 3 Hispanic or Latin American of any race At the survey estimates 7 8 of the total population was foreign born from 2015 to 2019 68 In 2015 61 3 was non Hispanic white 3 4 black or African American 13 3 American Indian or Alaska Native 6 2 Asian 0 9 Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander 0 3 some other race and 7 7 multiracial Hispanics and Latin Americans were 7 of the state population in 2015 69 From 2015 to 2019 the largest Hispanic and Latin American groups were Mexican Americans Puerto Ricans and Cuban Americans The largest Asian groups living in the state were Filipinos Korean Americans and Japanese and Chinese Americans 70 The state was 66 7 white 64 1 non Hispanic white 14 8 American Indian and Alaska Native 5 4 Asian 3 3 black or African American 1 0 Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander 1 6 from some other race and 7 3 from two or more races in 2010 Hispanics or Latin Americans of any race made up 5 5 of the population in 2010 71 As of 2011 update 50 7 of Alaska s population younger than one year of age belonged to minority groups i e did not have two parents of non Hispanic white ancestry 72 In 1960 the United States Census Bureau reported Alaska s population as 77 2 white 3 black and 18 8 American Indian and Alaska Native 73 Languages Edit Further information Alaska Native languages According to the 2011 American Community Survey 83 4 of people over the age of five spoke only English at home About 3 5 spoke Spanish at home 2 2 spoke another Indo European language about 4 3 spoke an Asian language including Tagalog 74 and about 5 3 spoke other languages at home 75 In 2019 the American Community Survey determined 83 7 spoke only English and 16 3 spoke another language other than English The most spoken European language after English was Spanish spoken by approximately 4 0 of the state population Collectively Asian and Pacific Islander languages were spoken by 5 6 of Alaskans 76 Since 2010 a total of 5 2 of Alaskans speak one of the state s 20 indigenous languages 77 known locally as native languages The Alaska Native Language Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks claims that at least 20 Alaskan native languages exist and there are also some languages with different dialects 78 Most of Alaska s native languages belong to either the Eskimo Aleut or Na Dene language families however some languages are thought to be isolates e g Haida or have not yet been classified e g Tsimshianic 78 As of 2014 update nearly all of Alaska s native languages were classified as either threatened shifting moribund nearly extinct or dormant languages 79 In October 2014 the governor of Alaska signed a bill declaring the state s 20 indigenous languages to have official status 80 81 This bill gave them symbolic recognition as official languages though they have not been adopted for official use within the government The 20 languages that were included in the bill are Inupiaq Siberian Yupik Central Alaskan Yup ik Alutiiq Unangax Dena ina Deg Xinag Holikachuk Koyukon Upper Kuskokwim Gwich in Tanana Upper Tanana Tanacross Han Ahtna Eyak Tlingit Haida Tsimshian Religion Edit See also Alaska Native religion and Shamanism among Alaska Natives St Michael s Russian Orthodox Cathedral in downtown Sitka Gold Rush era Baptist church in Eagle ChangePoint in south Anchorage left and Anchorage Baptist Temple in east Anchorage right are Alaska s largest churches in terms of attendance and membership According to statistics collected by the Association of Religion Data Archives from 2010 about 34 of Alaska residents were members of religious congregations Of the religious population 100 960 people identified as evangelical Protestants 50 866 as Roman Catholic and 32 550 as mainline Protestants 82 Roughly 4 were Mormon 0 5 Jewish 0 5 Muslim 1 Buddhist 0 2 Bahaʼi and 0 5 Hindu 83 The largest religious denominations in Alaska as of 2010 update was the Roman Catholic Church with 50 866 adherents non denominational Evangelicals with 38 070 adherents The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints with 32 170 adherents and the Southern Baptist Convention with 19 891 adherents 84 Alaska has been identified along with Washington and Oregon in the Pacific Northwest as being the least religious states in the United States in terms of church membership 85 86 The Pew Research Center in 2014 determined 62 of the adult population practiced Christianity Protestantism was the largest Christian tradition dominated by Evangelicalism Mainline Protestants were the second largest Protestant Christian group followed by predominantly African American churches The Roman Catholic Church remained the largest single Christian tradition practiced in Alaska Of the unaffiliated population they made up the largest non Christian religious affiliation Atheists made up 5 of the population and the largest non Christian religion was Buddhism In 2020 the Public Religion Research Institute determined 57 of adults were Christian 87 In 1795 the first Russian Orthodox Church was established in Kodiak Intermarriage with Alaskan Natives helped the Russian immigrants integrate into society As a result an increasing number of Russian Orthodox churches gradually became established within Alaska 88 Alaska also has the largest Quaker population by percentage of any state 89 In 2009 there were 6 000 Jews in Alaska for whom observance of halakha may pose special problems 90 Alaskan Hindus often share venues and celebrations with members of other Asian religious communities including Sikhs and Jains 91 92 93 In 2010 Alaskan Hindus established the Sri Ganesha Temple of Alaska making it the first Hindu Temple in Alaska and the northernmost Hindu Temple in the world There are an estimated 2 000 3 000 Hindus in Alaska The vast majority of Hindus live in Anchorage or Fairbanks Estimates for the number of Muslims in Alaska range from 2 000 to 5 000 94 95 96 The Islamic Community Center of Anchorage began efforts in the late 1990s to construct a mosque in Anchorage They broke ground on a building in south Anchorage in 2010 and were nearing completion in late 2014 When completed the mosque will be the first in the state and one of the northernmost mosques in the world 97 There s also a Bahaʼi center 98 Religious affiliation in Alaska 2014 99 Affiliation of populationChristian 62 62 Protestant 37 37 Evangelical Protestant 22 22 Mainline Protestant 12 12 Black church 3 3 Catholic 16 16 Mormon 5 5 Jehovah s Witnesses 0 5 0 5 Eastern Orthodox 5 5 Other Christian 0 5 0 5 Unaffiliated 31 31 Nothing in particular 20 20 Agnostic 6 6 Atheist 5 5 Non Christian faiths 6 6 Jewish 0 5 0 5 Muslim 0 5 0 5 Bahaʼi 0 2 0 2 Buddhist 1 1 Hindu 0 5 0 5 Other Non Christian faiths 4 4 Don t know refused answer 1 1 Total 100 100 Economy EditMain article Economy of Alaska See also Alaska locations by per capita income and List of Alaska companies Aerial view of infrastructure at the Prudhoe Bay Oil FieldAs of October 2022 Alaska had a total employment of 316 900 The number of employer establishments was 21 077 100 The 2018 gross state product was 55 billion 48th in the U S Its per capita personal income for 2018 was 73 000 ranking 7th in the nation According to a 2013 study by Phoenix Marketing International Alaska had the fifth largest number of millionaires per capita in the United States with a ratio of 6 75 percent 101 The oil and gas industry dominates the Alaskan economy with more than 80 of the state s revenues derived from petroleum extraction Alaska s main export product excluding oil and natural gas is seafood primarily salmon cod pollock and crab Agriculture represents a very small fraction of the Alaskan economy Agricultural production is primarily for consumption within the state and includes nursery stock dairy products vegetables and livestock Manufacturing is limited with most foodstuffs and general goods imported from elsewhere Employment is primarily in government and industries such as natural resource extraction shipping and transportation Military bases are a significant component of the economy in the Fairbanks North Star Anchorage and Kodiak Island boroughs as well as Kodiak Federal subsidies are also an important part of the economy allowing the state to keep taxes low Its industrial outputs are crude petroleum natural gas coal gold precious metals zinc and other mining seafood processing timber and wood products There is also a growing service and tourism sector Tourists have contributed to the economy by supporting local lodging Energy Edit See also Natural gas in Alaska List of power stations in Alaska and Energy law Alaska law The Trans Alaska Pipeline transports oil Alaska s most financially important export from the North Slope to Valdez The heat pipes in the column mounts are pertinent since they disperse heat upwards and prevent melting of permafrost Alaska proven oil reserves peaked in 1973 and have declined more than 60 since then Alaskan oil production peaked in 1988 and has declined more than 75 since then Alaska has vast energy resources although its oil reserves have been largely depleted Major oil and gas reserves were found in the Alaska North Slope ANS and Cook Inlet basins but according to the Energy Information Administration by February 2014 Alaska had fallen to fourth place in the nation in crude oil production after Texas North Dakota and California 102 103 Prudhoe Bay on Alaska s North Slope is still the second highest yielding oil field in the United States typically producing about 400 000 barrels per day 64 000 m3 d although by early 2014 North Dakota s Bakken Formation was producing over 900 000 barrels per day 140 000 m3 d 104 Prudhoe Bay was the largest conventional oil field ever discovered in North America but was much smaller than Canada s enormous Athabasca oil sands field which by 2014 was producing about 1 500 000 barrels per day 240 000 m3 d of unconventional oil and had hundreds of years of producible reserves at that rate 105 The Trans Alaska Pipeline can transport and pump up to 2 1 million barrels 330 000 m3 of crude oil per day more than any other crude oil pipeline in the United States Additionally substantial coal deposits are found in Alaska s bituminous sub bituminous and lignite coal basins The United States Geological Survey estimates that there are 85 4 trillion cubic feet 2 420 km3 of undiscovered technically recoverable gas from natural gas hydrates on the Alaskan North Slope 106 Alaska also offers some of the highest hydroelectric power potential in the country from its numerous rivers Large swaths of the Alaskan coastline offer wind and geothermal energy potential as well 107 Alaska s economy depends heavily on increasingly expensive diesel fuel for heating transportation electric power and light Although wind and hydroelectric power are abundant and underdeveloped proposals for statewide energy systems e g with special low cost electric interties were judged uneconomical at the time of the report 2001 due to low less than 50 gal fuel prices long distances and low population 108 The cost of a gallon of gas in urban Alaska today is usually thirty to sixty cents higher than the national average prices in rural areas are generally significantly higher but vary widely depending on transportation costs seasonal usage peaks nearby petroleum development infrastructure and many other factors Permanent Fund Edit The Alaska Permanent Fund is a constitutionally authorized appropriation of oil revenues established by voters in 1976 to manage a surplus in state petroleum revenues from oil largely in anticipation of the then recently constructed Trans Alaska Pipeline System The fund was originally proposed by Governor Keith Miller on the eve of the 1969 Prudhoe Bay lease sale out of fear that the legislature would spend the entire proceeds of the sale which amounted to 900 million at once It was later championed by Governor Jay Hammond and Kenai state representative Hugh Malone It has served as an attractive political prospect ever since diverting revenues which would normally be deposited into the general fund The Alaska Constitution was written so as to discourage dedicating state funds for a particular purpose The Permanent Fund has become the rare exception to this mostly due to the political climate of distrust existing during the time of its creation From its initial principal of 734 000 the fund has grown to 50 billion as a result of oil royalties and capital investment programs 109 Most if not all the principal is invested conservatively outside Alaska This has led to frequent calls by Alaskan politicians for the Fund to make investments within Alaska though such a stance has never gained momentum Starting in 1982 dividends from the fund s annual growth have been paid out each year to eligible Alaskans ranging from an initial 1 000 in 1982 equal to three years payout as the distribution of payments was held up in a lawsuit over the distribution scheme to 3 269 in 2008 which included a one time 1 200 Resource Rebate Every year the state legislature takes out 8 from the earnings puts 3 back into the principal for inflation proofing and the remaining 5 is distributed to all qualifying Alaskans To qualify for the Permanent Fund Dividend one must have lived in the state for a minimum of 12 months maintain constant residency subject to allowable absences 110 and not be subject to court judgments or criminal convictions which fall under various disqualifying classifications or may subject the payment amount to civil garnishment The Permanent Fund is often considered to be one of the leading examples of a basic income policy in the world 111 Cost of living Edit The cost of goods in Alaska has long been higher than in the contiguous 48 states Federal government employees particularly United States Postal Service USPS workers and active duty military members receive a Cost of Living Allowance usually set at 25 of base pay because while the cost of living has gone down it is still one of the highest in the country 112 Rural Alaska suffers from extremely high prices for food and consumer goods compared to the rest of the country due to the relatively limited transportation infrastructure 112 Agriculture and fishing Edit Halibut both as a sport fish and commercially is important to the state s economy Due to the northern climate and short growing season relatively little farming occurs in Alaska Most farms are in either the Matanuska Valley about 40 miles 64 km northeast of Anchorage or on the Kenai Peninsula about 60 miles 97 km southwest of Anchorage The short 100 day growing season limits the crops that can be grown but the long sunny summer days make for productive growing seasons The primary crops are potatoes carrots lettuce and cabbage The Tanana Valley is another notable agricultural locus especially the Delta Junction area about 100 miles 160 km southeast of Fairbanks with a sizable concentration of farms growing agronomic crops these farms mostly lie north and east of Fort Greely This area was largely set aside and developed under a state program spearheaded by Hammond during his second term as governor Delta area crops consist predominantly of barley and hay West of Fairbanks lies another concentration of small farms catering to restaurants the hotel and tourist industry and community supported agriculture Alaskan agriculture has experienced a surge in growth of market gardeners small farms and farmers markets in recent years with the highest percentage increase 46 in the nation in growth in farmers markets in 2011 compared to 17 nationwide 113 The peony industry has also taken off as the growing season allows farmers to harvest during a gap in supply elsewhere in the world thereby filling a niche in the flower market 114 Oversized vegetables on display at the Alaska State Fair left and the Tanana Valley State Fair right Alaska with no counties lacks county fairs However a small assortment of state and local fairs with the Alaska State Fair in Palmer the largest are held mostly in the late summer The fairs are mostly located in communities with historic or current agricultural activity and feature local farmers exhibiting produce in addition to more high profile commercial activities such as carnival rides concerts and food Alaska Grown is used as an agricultural slogan Alaska has an abundance of seafood with the primary fisheries in the Bering Sea and the North Pacific Seafood is one of the few food items that is often cheaper within the state than outside it Many Alaskans take advantage of salmon seasons to harvest portions of their household diet while fishing for subsistence as well as sport This includes fish taken by hook net or wheel 115 Hunting for subsistence primarily caribou moose and Dall sheep is still common in the state particularly in remote Bush communities An example of a traditional native food is Akutaq the Eskimo ice cream which can consist of reindeer fat seal oil dried fish meat and local berries Alaska s reindeer herding is concentrated on Seward Peninsula where wild caribou can be prevented from mingling and migrating with the domesticated reindeer 116 Most food in Alaska is transported into the state from Outside the other 49 US states and shipping costs make food in the cities relatively expensive In rural areas subsistence hunting and gathering is an essential activity because imported food is prohibitively expensive Although most small towns and villages in Alaska lie along the coastline the cost of importing food to remote villages can be high because of the terrain and difficult road conditions which change dramatically due to varying climate and precipitation changes The cost of transport can reach as high as 50 per pound 1 10 kg or more in some remote areas during the most difficult times if these locations can be reached at all during such inclement weather and terrain conditions The cost of delivering a 1 US gallon 3 8 L of milk is about 3 50 in many villages where per capita income can be 20 000 or less Fuel cost per gallon is routinely twenty to thirty cents higher than the contiguous United States average with only Hawaii having higher prices 117 118 Culture EditSee also List of artists and writers from Alaska A dog team in the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race arguably the most popular winter event in Alaska Mask Display at Inupiat Heritage Center in Utqiaġvik Some of Alaska s popular annual events are the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race from Anchorage to Nome World Ice Art Championships in Fairbanks the Blueberry Festival and Alaska Hummingbird Festival in Ketchikan the Sitka Whale Fest and the Stikine River Garnet Fest in Wrangell The Stikine River attracts the largest springtime concentration of American bald eagles in the world The Alaska Native Heritage Center celebrates the rich heritage of Alaska s 11 cultural groups Their purpose is to encourage cross cultural exchanges among all people and enhance self esteem among Native people The Alaska Native Arts Foundation promotes and markets Native art from all regions and cultures in the State using the internet 119 Music Edit Main article Music of Alaska Influences on music in Alaska include the traditional music of Alaska Natives as well as folk music brought by later immigrants from Russia and Europe Prominent musicians from Alaska include singer Jewel traditional Aleut flautist Mary Youngblood folk singer songwriter Libby Roderick Christian music singer songwriter Lincoln Brewster metal post hardcore band 36 Crazyfists and the groups Pamyua and Portugal The Man There are many established music festivals in Alaska including the Alaska Folk Festival the Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival the Anchorage Folk Festival the Athabascan Old Time Fiddling Festival the Sitka Jazz Festival and the Sitka Summer Music Festival The most prominent orchestra in Alaska is the Anchorage Symphony Orchestra though the Fairbanks Symphony Orchestra and Juneau Symphony are also notable The Anchorage Opera is currently the state s only professional opera company though there are several volunteer and semi professional organizations in the state as well The official state song of Alaska is Alaska s Flag which was adopted in 1955 it celebrates the flag of Alaska Alaska in film television videogames Edit See also List of films set in Alaska Films featuring Alaskan wolves usually employ domesticated wolf dog hybrids to stand in for wild wolves Alaska s first independent picture entirely made in Alaska was The Chechahcos produced by Alaskan businessman Austin E Lathrop and filmed in and around Anchorage Released in 1924 by the Alaska Moving Picture Corporation it was the only film the company made One of the most prominent movies filmed in Alaska is MGM s Eskimo Mala The Magnificent starring Alaska Native Ray Mala In 1932 an expedition set out from MGM s studios in Hollywood to Alaska to film what was then billed as The Biggest Picture Ever Made Upon arriving in Alaska they set up Camp Hollywood in Northwest Alaska where they lived during the duration of the filming Louis B Mayer spared no expense in spite of the remote location going so far as to hire the chef from the Hotel Roosevelt in Hollywood to prepare meals citation needed When Eskimo premiered at the Astor Theatre in New York City the studio received the largest amount of feedback in its history Eskimo was critically acclaimed and released worldwide as a result Mala became an international movie star Eskimo won the first Oscar for Best Film Editing at the Academy Awards and showcased and preserved aspects of Inupiat culture on film The 1983 Disney movie Never Cry Wolf was at least partially shot in Alaska The 1991 film White Fang based on Jack London s 1906 novel and starring Ethan Hawke was filmed in and around Haines Steven Seagal s 1994 On Deadly Ground starring Michael Caine was filmed in part at the Worthington Glacier near Valdez 120 The 1999 John Sayles film Limbo starring David Strathairn Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio and Kris Kristofferson was filmed in Juneau The psychological thriller Insomnia starring Al Pacino and Robin Williams was shot in Canada but was set in Alaska The 2007 film directed by Sean Penn Into The Wild was partially filmed and set in Alaska The film which is based on the novel of the same name follows the adventures of Christopher McCandless who died in a remote abandoned bus along the Stampede Trail west of Healy in 1992 Many films and television shows set in Alaska are not filmed there for example Northern Exposure set in the fictional town of Cicely Alaska was filmed in Roslyn Washington The 2007 horror feature 30 Days of Night is set in Barrow Alaska note 1 but was filmed in New Zealand Many reality television shows are filmed in Alaska In 2011 the Anchorage Daily News found ten set in the state 121 The 2020 videogame Tell Me Why video game takes place around Southern Alaska and includes representation of Tlingit culture Sports Edit Main article Sports in Alaska See also Alaska Sports Hall of FamePublic health and public safety EditSee also Dentistry in rural Alaska The Alaska State Troopers are Alaska s statewide police force They have a long and storied history but were not an official organization until 1941 Before the force was officially organized law enforcement in Alaska was handled by various federal agencies Larger towns usually have their own local police and some villages rely on Public Safety Officers who have police training but do not carry firearms In much of the state the troopers serve as the only police force available In addition to enforcing traffic and criminal law wildlife Troopers enforce hunting and fishing regulations Due to the varied terrain and wide scope of the Troopers duties they employ a wide variety of land air and water patrol vehicles Many rural communities in Alaska are considered dry having outlawed the importation of alcoholic beverages 122 Suicide rates for rural residents are higher than urban 123 Domestic abuse and other violent crimes are also at high levels in the state this is in part linked to alcohol abuse 124 Alaska has the highest rate of sexual assault in the nation especially in rural areas The average age of sexually assaulted victims is 16 years old In four out of five cases the suspects were relatives friends or acquaintances 125 Education Edit The Kachemak Bay Campus of the University of Alaska Anchorage located in downtown Homer The Alaska Department of Education and Early Development administers many school districts in Alaska In addition the state operates a boarding school Mt Edgecumbe High School in Sitka and provides partial funding for other boarding schools including Nenana Student Living Center in Nenana and The Galena Interior Learning Academy in Galena 126 There are more than a dozen colleges and universities in Alaska Accredited universities in Alaska include the University of Alaska Anchorage University of Alaska Fairbanks University of Alaska Southeast and Alaska Pacific University 127 Alaska is the only state that has no collegiate athletic programs that are members of NCAA Division I although both Alaska Fairbanks and Alaska Anchorage maintain single sport membership in Division I for men s ice hockey The Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development operates AVTEC Alaska s Institute of Technology 128 Campuses in Seward and Anchorage offer one week to 11 month training programs in areas as diverse as Information Technology Welding Nursing and Mechanics Alaska has had a problem with a brain drain Many of its young people including most of the highest academic achievers leave the state after high school graduation and do not return As of 2013 update Alaska did not have a law school or medical school 129 The University of Alaska has attempted to combat this by offering partial four year scholarships to the top 10 of Alaska high school graduates via the Alaska Scholars Program 130 Beginning in 1998 schools in rural Alaska must have at least 10 students to retain funding from the state and campuses not meeting the number close This was due to the loss in oil revenues that previously propped up smaller rural schools 131 In 2015 there was a proposal to raise that minimum to 25 132 but legislators in the state largely did not agree 133 Transportation EditMain article Transportation in Alaska This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alaska news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Roads Edit See also List of Alaska Routes Alaska has few road connections compared to the rest of the U S The state s road system covering a relatively small area of the state linking the central population centers and the Alaska Highway the principal route out of the state through Canada The state capital Juneau is not accessible by road only a car ferry this has spurred debate over decades about moving the capital to a city on the road system or building a road connection from Haines The western part of Alaska has no road system connecting the communities with the rest of Alaska The Interstate Highways in Alaska consists of a total of 1 082 miles 1 741 km One unique feature of the Alaska Highway system is the Anton Anderson Memorial Tunnel an active Alaska Railroad tunnel recently upgraded to provide a paved roadway link with the isolated community of Whittier on Prince William Sound to the Seward Highway about 50 miles 80 km southeast of Anchorage at Portage At 2 5 miles 4 0 km the tunnel was the longest road tunnel in North America until 2007 134 The tunnel is the longest combination road and rail tunnel in North America The Sterling Highway near its intersection with the Seward Highway The Susitna River bridge on the Denali Highway is 1 036 feet 316 m long Alaska Interstate Highways Alaska welcome sign on the Klondike HighwayRail Edit Built around 1915 the Alaska Railroad ARR played a key role in the development of Alaska through the 20th century It links north Pacific shipping through providing critical infrastructure with tracks that run from Seward to Interior Alaska by way of South Central Alaska passing through Anchorage Eklutna Wasilla Talkeetna Denali and Fairbanks with spurs to Whittier Palmer and North Pole The cities towns villages and region served by ARR tracks are known statewide as The Railbelt In recent years the ever improving paved highway system began to eclipse the railroad s importance in Alaska s economy The railroad played a vital role in Alaska s development moving freight into Alaska while transporting natural resources southward such as coal from the Usibelli coal mine near Healy to Seward and gravel from the Matanuska Valley to Anchorage It is well known for its summertime tour passenger service The Alaska Railroad was one of the last railroads in North America to use cabooses in regular service and still uses them on some gravel trains It continues to offer one of the last flag stop routes in the country A stretch of about 60 miles 100 km of track along an area north of Talkeetna remains inaccessible by road the railroad provides the only transportation to rural homes and cabins in the area Until construction of the Parks Highway in the 1970s the railroad provided the only land access to most of the region along its entire route In northern Southeast Alaska the White Pass and Yukon Route also partly runs through the state from Skagway northwards into Canada British Columbia and Yukon Territory crossing the border at White Pass Summit This line is now mainly used by tourists often arriving by cruise liner at Skagway It was featured in the 1983 BBC television series Great Little Railways The Alaska Rail network is not connected to Outside The nearest link to the North American railway network is the northwest terminus of the Canadian National Railway at Prince Rupert British Columbia several hundred miles to the southeast In 2000 the U S Congress authorized 6 million to study the feasibility of a rail link between Alaska Canada and the lower 48 135 136 137 Some private companies provides car float service between Whittier and Seattle An Alaska Railroad locomotive over a bridge in Girdwood approaching Anchorage 2007 The White Pass and Yukon Route traverses rugged terrain north of Skagway near the Canada US border Marine transport Edit Many cities towns and villages in the state do not have road or highway access the only modes of access involve travel by air river or the sea The MV Tustumena named after Tustumena Glacier is one of the state s many ferries providing service between the Kenai Peninsula Kodiak Island and the Aleutian Chain Alaska s well developed state owned ferry system known as the Alaska Marine Highway serves the cities of southeast the Gulf Coast and the Alaska Peninsula The ferries transport vehicles as well as passengers The system also operates a ferry service from Bellingham Washington and Prince Rupert British Columbia in Canada through the Inside Passage to Skagway The Inter Island Ferry Authority also serves as an important marine link for many communities in the Prince of Wales Island region of Southeast and works in concert with the Alaska Marine Highway In recent years cruise lines have created a summertime tourism market mainly connecting the Pacific Northwest to Southeast Alaska and to a lesser degree towns along Alaska s gulf coast The population of Ketchikan for example fluctuates dramatically on many days up to four large cruise ships can dock there at the same time Air transport Edit Cities not served by road sea or river can be reached only by air foot dogsled or snowmachine accounting for Alaska s extremely well developed bush air services an Alaskan novelty Anchorage and to a lesser extent Fairbanks is served by many major airlines Because of limited highway access air travel remains the most efficient form of transportation in and out of the state Anchorage recently completed extensive remodeling and construction at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport to help accommodate the upsurge in tourism in 2012 2013 Alaska received almost two million visitors 138 Regular flights to most villages and towns within the state that are commercially viable are challenging to provide so they are heavily subsidized by the federal government through the Essential Air Service program Alaska Airlines is the only major airline offering in state travel with jet service sometimes in combination cargo and passenger Boeing 737 400s from Anchorage and Fairbanks to regional hubs like Bethel Nome Kotzebue Dillingham Kodiak and other larger communities as well as to major Southeast and Alaska Peninsula communities A Bombardier Dash 8 operated by Era Alaska on approach to Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport The bulk of remaining commercial flight offerings come from small regional commuter airlines such as Ravn Alaska PenAir and Frontier Flying Service The smallest towns and villages must rely on scheduled or chartered bush flying services using general aviation aircraft such as the Cessna Caravan the most popular aircraft in use in the state Much of this service can be attributed to the Alaska bypass mail program which subsidizes bulk mail delivery to Alaskan rural communities The program requires 70 of that subsidy to go to carriers who offer passenger service to the communities Many communities have small air taxi services These operations originated from the demand for customized transport to remote areas Perhaps the most quintessentially Alaskan plane is the bush seaplane The world s busiest seaplane base is Lake Hood located next to Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport where flights bound for remote villages without an airstrip carry passengers cargo and many items from stores and warehouse clubs In 2006 Alaska had the highest number of pilots per capita of any U S state 139 In Alaska there are 8 795 active pilot certificates as of 2020 140 Of these there are 2 507 Private 1 496 Commercial 2 180 Airline Transport and 2 239 student pilots There are also 3 987 pilots with an Instrument rating and 1 511 Flight Instructors Other transport Edit Another Alaskan transportation method is the dogsled In modern times that is any time after the mid late 1920s dog mushing is more of a sport than a true means of transportation Various races are held around the state but the best known is the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race a 1 150 mile 1 850 km trail from Anchorage to Nome although the distance varies from year to year the official distance is set at 1 049 miles or 1 688 km The race commemorates the famous 1925 serum run to Nome in which mushers and dogs like Togo and Balto took much needed medicine to the diphtheria stricken community of Nome when all other means of transportation had failed Mushers from all over the world come to Anchorage each March to compete for cash prizes and prestige The Serum Run is another sled dog race that more accurately follows the route of the famous 1925 relay leaving from the community of Nenana southwest of Fairbanks to Nome 141 In areas not served by road or rail primary transportation in summer is by all terrain vehicle and in winter by snowmobile or snow machine as it is commonly referred to in Alaska 142 Data transport Edit Alaska s internet and other data transport systems are provided largely through the two major telecommunications companies GCI and Alaska Communications GCI owns and operates what it calls the Alaska United Fiber Optic system 143 and as of late 2011 Alaska Communications advertised that it has two fiber optic paths to the lower 48 and two more across Alaska 144 In January 2011 it was reported that a 1 billion project to connect Asia and rural Alaska was being planned aided in part by 350 million in stimulus from the federal government 145 Law and government EditState government Edit Main article Government of Alaska The center of state government in Juneau The large buildings in the background are from left to right the Court Plaza Building known colloquially as the Spam Can the State Office Building behind the Alaska Office Building the John H Dimond State Courthouse and the Alaska State Capitol Many of the smaller buildings in the foreground are also occupied by state government agencies Like all other U S states Alaska is governed as a republic with three branches of government an executive branch consisting of the governor of Alaska and their appointees which head executive departments a legislative branch consisting of the Alaska House of Representatives and Alaska Senate and a judicial branch consisting of the Alaska Supreme Court and lower courts The state of Alaska employs approximately 16 000 people statewide 146 The Alaska Legislature consists of a 40 member House of Representatives and a 20 member Senate Senators serve four year terms and House members two The governor of Alaska serves four year terms The lieutenant governor runs separately from the governor in the primaries but during the general election the nominee for governor and nominee for lieutenant governor run together on the same ticket Alaska s court system has four levels the Alaska Supreme Court the Alaska Court of Appeals the superior courts and the district courts 147 The superior and district courts are trial courts Superior courts are courts of general jurisdiction while district courts hear only certain types of cases including misdemeanor criminal cases and civil cases valued up to 100 000 147 The Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals are appellate courts The Court of Appeals is required to hear appeals from certain lower court decisions including those regarding criminal prosecutions juvenile delinquency and habeas corpus 147 The Supreme Court hears civil appeals and may in its discretion hear criminal appeals 147 State politics Edit Main article Politics of Alaska Further information Political party strength in Alaska and Alaska political corruption probe Gubernatorial election results 148 Year Democratic Republican Others1958 59 6 29 189 39 4 19 2991962 52 3 29 627 47 7 27 0541966 48 4 32 065 50 0 33 1451970 52 4 42 309 46 1 37 2641974 47 4 45 553 47 7 45 8401978 20 2 25 656 39 1 49 5801982 46 1 89 918 37 1 72 2911986 47 3 84 943 42 6 76 5151990 30 9 60 201 26 2 50 991 38 9 75 721 a 1994 41 1 87 693 40 8 87 1571998 51 3 112 879 17 9 39 3312002 40 7 94 216 55 9 129 2792006 41 0 97 238 48 3 114 6972010 37 7 96 519 59 1 151 3182014 0 0 0 45 9 128 435 48 1 134 658 b 2018 44 4 125 739 51 4 145 6312022 24 2 63 755 50 3 132 392Although in its early years of statehood Alaska was a Democratic state since the early 1970s it has been characterized as Republican leaning 149 Local political communities have often worked on issues related to land use development fishing tourism and individual rights Alaska Natives while organized in and around their communities have been active within the Native corporations These have been given ownership over large tracts of land which require stewardship Alaska was formerly the only state in which possession of one ounce or less of marijuana in one s home was completely legal under state law though the federal law remains in force 150 The state has an independence movement favoring a vote on secession from the United States with the Alaskan Independence Party 151 Six Republicans and four Democrats have served as governor of Alaska In addition Republican governor Wally Hickel was elected to the office for a second term in 1990 after leaving the Republican party and briefly joining the Alaskan Independence Party ticket just long enough to be reelected He officially rejoined the Republican party in 1994 Alaska s voter initiative making marijuana legal took effect on February 24 2015 placing Alaska alongside Colorado and Washington as the first three U S states where recreational marijuana is legal The new law means people over 21 can consume small amounts of cannabis 152 The first legal marijuana store opened in Valdez in October 2016 153 Voter registration Edit Party registration as of November 2022 154 Party Total voters PercentageUnaffiliated 349 661 58 04 Republican 144 542 23 99 Democratic 77 137 12 80 Alaskan Independence 19 277 3 20 Other political groups 11 803 1 97 Total 602 420 100 Taxes Edit To finance state government operations Alaska depends primarily on petroleum revenues and federal subsidies This allows it to have the lowest individual tax burden in the United States 155 It is one of five states with no sales tax one of seven states with no individual income tax and along with New Hampshire one of two that has neither 156 The Department of Revenue Tax Division 157 reports regularly on the state s revenue sources The department also issues an annual summary of its operations including new state laws that directly affect the tax division In 2014 the Tax Foundation ranked Alaska as having the fourth most business friendly tax policy behind only Wyoming South Dakota and Nevada 158 While Alaska has no state sales tax 89 municipalities collect a local sales tax from 1 0 to 7 5 typically 3 5 Other local taxes levied include raw fish taxes hotel motel and bed and breakfast bed taxes severance taxes liquor and tobacco taxes gaming pull tabs taxes tire taxes and fuel transfer taxes A part of the revenue collected from certain state taxes and license fees such as petroleum aviation motor fuel telephone cooperative is shared with municipalities in Alaska The fall in oil prices after the fracking boom in the early 2010s has decimated Alaska s state treasury which has historically received about 85 percent of its revenue from taxes and fees imposed on oil and gas companies 159 The state government has had to drastically reduce its budget and has brought its budget shortfall from over 2 billion in 2016 to under 500 million by 2018 In 2020 Alaska s state government budget was 4 8 billion while projected government revenues were only 4 5 billion 160 Federal politics Edit Main article Politics of Alaska See also Arctic Policy of the United States A line graph showing the presidential vote by party from 1960 to 2016 in Alaska Alaska regularly supports Republicans in presidential elections and has done so since statehood Republicans have won the state s electoral college votes in all but one election that it has participated in 1964 No state has voted for a Democratic presidential candidate fewer times Alaska was carried by Democratic nominee Lyndon B Johnson during his landslide election in 1964 while the 1960 and 1968 elections were close Since 1972 however Republicans have carried the state by large margins In 2008 Republican John McCain defeated Democrat Barack Obama in Alaska 59 49 to 37 83 McCain s running mate was Sarah Palin the state s governor and the first Alaskan on a major party ticket Obama lost Alaska again in 2012 but he captured 40 of the state s vote in that election making him the first Democrat to do so since 1968 In 2020 Joe Biden received 42 77 of the vote for president marking the high point for a Democratic presidential candidate since Johnson s 1964 victory The Alaska Bush central Juneau midtown and downtown Anchorage and the areas surrounding the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus and Ester have been strongholds of the Democratic Party The Matanuska Susitna Borough the majority of Fairbanks including North Pole and the military base and South Anchorage typically have the strongest Republican showing Elections Edit See also Ranked choice voting in the United States and Nonpartisan blanket primary This section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message December 2020 Alaska has had a long history of primary defeats for incumbent U S Senators with Ernest Gruening Mike Gravel and Lisa Murkowski all being defeated for the nomination to their re election However Murkowski won re election with a write in campaign Despite this Alaska has had some long serving congressmen with Ted Stevens serving as U S Senator for 40 years and Don Young serving as the at large representative for 49 years Republican Don Young held Alaska s sole U S House seat for 49 years from 1973 to 2022 In a 2020 study Alaska was ranked as the 15th hardest state for citizens to vote in 161 In the 2020 election cycle Alaskan voters approved Ballot Measure 2 162 The measure passed by a margin of 1 1 or about 4 000 votes 163 The measure requires campaigns to disclose the original source and any intermediaries for campaign contributions over 2 000 The measure also establishes non partisan blanket primaries for statewide elections like in Washington state and California and ranked choice voting like in Maine 163 Measure 2 makes Alaska the third state with jungle primaries for all statewide races the second state with ranked choice voting and the only state with both The first race to use the new system of elections was the 2022 special election to fill Alaska s only U S House seat left vacant by the death of Don Young won by Mary Peltola the first Democrat to win the House seat since 1972 and the first Alaskan Native to be elected to the United States Congress in history Alaska s current statewide elected 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Archives Maps amp Reports thearda com Archived from the original on December 12 2013 Retrieved November 15 2013 Adherents com Adherents com Archived from the original on May 5 2010 Retrieved June 2 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Believe it or not Alaska s one of nation s least religious states Anchorage Daily News July 13 2008 Archived from the original on January 16 2009 Retrieved July 23 2008 PRRI American Values Atlas ava prri org Retrieved September 17 2022 An early Russian Orthodox Church Vilda alaska edu Archived from the original on February 25 2008 Retrieved June 2 2010 Association of Religion Data Archive Thearda com Archived from the original on January 13 2012 Retrieved June 2 2010 Table 76 Religious Bodies Selected Data U S Census Bureau Statistical Abstract of the United States 2011 Kalyan Mala Shri Ganesha Mandir of Alaska Cultural Association of India Anchorage Archived from the original on February 1 2009 Retrieved September 26 2009 Hindu Temples in USA Hindu Mandirs in USA Hindumandir us Archived from the original on June 16 2010 Retrieved June 2 2010 Holi amp Baisakhi celebrated by Alaskan Hindus and Sikhs Cultural Association of India Anchorage Archived from the original on February 1 2009 Retrieved September 26 2009 First Muslim cemetery opens in Alaska Archived from the original on January 16 2009 Retrieved August 30 2008 Engaging Muslim Religion Culture Politics Archived from the original on February 15 2009 Retrieved August 30 2008 Alaskan Muslims Avoid Conflict Humanitynews net July 7 2005 Archived from the original on January 13 2009 Retrieved June 2 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Mosque milestone for Alaska Muslims Americas Al Jazeera December 25 2010 Archived from the original on February 4 2011 Retrieved May 29 2011 Alaska Baha i Community Archived from the original on January 17 2019 Retrieved January 16 2019 Adults in Alaska Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project May 11 2015 Archived from the original on January 14 2016 Retrieved January 1 2016 U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Alaska Archived from the original on October 15 2019 Retrieved November 11 2019 Frank Robert January 15 2014 Top states for millionaires per capita CNBC Archived from the original on January 22 2014 Retrieved January 22 2014 EIA State Energy Profiles Alaska U S Energy Information Administration March 27 2014 Archived from the original on May 22 2014 Retrieved May 21 2014 Rankings Crude Oil Production February 2013 United States Energy Information Administration Archived from the original on October 19 2013 Retrieved May 19 2014 ND Monthly Bakken Oil Production Statistics PDF North Dakota Department of Mineral Resources Archived PDF from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved May 21 2014 Crude Oil Forecast Markets and Transportation Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers June 2013 Archived from the original on May 22 2014 Retrieved May 21 2014 Gas Hydrates on Alaska s North Slope Usgs gov Archived from the original on June 1 2010 Retrieved June 2 2010 EIA State Energy Profiles Alaska Tonto eia doe gov August 27 2009 Archived from the original on November 3 2010 Retrieved November 7 2010 Screening Report for Alaska Rural Energy Plan PDF April 2001 Archived from the original PDF on February 16 2008 Retrieved April 11 2006 Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation apfc org Archived from the original on May 20 2007 Retrieved May 29 2007 State of Alaska Permanent Fund Division Pfd state ak us Archived from the original on April 20 2010 Retrieved June 2 2010 Alaska s Citizens Dividend Set To Be Near Highest Ever BIEN Archived from the original on November 3 2015 Retrieved November 3 2015 a b Economic Forecast Released Economic Forecast Released Retrieved February 4 2021 More than 1 000 New Farmers Markets Recorded Across Country as USDA Directory Reveals 17 Percent Growth USDA Newsroom Usda gov August 5 2011 Archived from the original on January 17 2013 Retrieved June 14 2012 Welcome to The Alaska Peony Growers Association Alaskapeonies org Archived from the original on June 30 2012 Retrieved June 14 2012 Alaska Department of Fish and Game Adfg alaska gov Archived from the original on June 24 2011 Retrieved May 29 2011 Reindeer Herding Reindeer salrm uaf edu Archived from the original on November 19 2010 Retrieved November 7 2010 Daily Fuel Gauge Report Automobile Association of America Archived from the original on June 20 2013 Retrieved May 18 2013 Retail Fuel Pricing and News Oil Price Information Service Archived from the original on June 2 2013 Retrieved May 18 2013 Alaska Native Arts Foundation alaskanativearts org Archived from the original on July 17 2014 Retrieved November 28 2019 On Deadly Ground Filminamerica com Archived from the original on December 27 2010 Retrieved November 7 2010 Hopkins Kyle February 14 2011 Rating the Alaska reality shows The best and the worst Anchorage Daily News Archived from the original on March 2 2013 Retrieved March 2 2013 Alaska State Troopers Alaska Bureau of Alcohol and Drug Enforcement Control Board PDF Dps state ak us Archived from the original PDF on December 30 2013 Retrieved May 30 2014 State of Alaska Hss state ak us Archived from the original on September 25 2009 Retrieved June 2 2010 Survey reveals higher rate of violence against Alaska women Archived from the original on May 31 2014 Retrieved May 30 2014 D oro Rachel January 30 2008 Rural Alaska steeped in sexual violence USA Today Archived from the original on November 5 2010 Retrieved December 31 2010 Asset Building in Residence Life Alaska ICE April 4 2009 Archived from the original on October 9 2007 These are the only three universities in the state ranked by U S News amp World Report USNews com America s Best Colleges 2007 Archived from the original on January 1 2007 Retrieved January 3 2007 AVTECHome Page Avtec labor state ak us Archived from the original on October 9 2011 Retrieved September 7 2012 House Bill 43 University Institutes of Law And Medicine States News Service February 5 2013 archived from the original on December 30 2013 retrieved December 21 2013 UA Scholars Program Frequently Asked Questions Archived from the original on March 9 2008 Retrieved December 28 2009 Alaska s Rural Schools Fight Off Extinction The New York Times November 25 2009 Retrieved July 15 2021 Colton Hannah October 26 2015 Proposed increase to minimum enrollment threatens funding for dozens of small schools Alaska Public Radio KLDG Retrieved July 15 2021 Colton Hannah November 11 2015 Bill to cut funding to small schools finds little support among Alaska lawmakers KDLG Retrieved July 15 2021 completion of the 3 5 mile 5 6 km Interstate 93 tunnel as part of the Big Dig project in Boston Massachusetts Barbara Yaffe January 2 2011 Alaska Oil BC Tar sands via rail Archived from the original on December 19 2010 Retrieved January 2 2011 Allan Dowd June 27 2007 Economic study touts Alaska Canada rail link Reuters Archived from the original on July 13 2019 Retrieved January 2 2011 AlaskaCanadaRail org January 2 2005 Alaska Canada Rail Link Archived from the original on April 25 2011 Retrieved January 2 2011 State of Alaska Office of Economic Development Economic Impact of Alaska s Visitor Industry Archived May 22 2014 at the Wayback Machine January 2014 Retrieved May 21 2014 Out of the estimated 663 661 residents 8 550 were pilots or about one in 78 Federal Aviation Administration 2005 U S Civil Airman Statistics Archived December 29 2009 at the Wayback Machine U S Civil Airmen Statistics www faa gov Retrieved November 1 2020 Norman Vaughan Serum Run United Nations April 15 2010 Archived from the original on March 3 2009 Retrieved June 2 2010 Friedman Sam April 10 2015 Snowmachine or snowmobile Whatever you call it there s a lot riding on it Fairbanks Daily Newsminer Archived from the original on February 1 2018 Retrieved October 19 2017 Alaska United Fiber Optic System homepage Alaskaunited com Archived from the original on February 6 2012 Retrieved July 24 2012 Alaska Communications Coverage Map Archived January 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine Alaska Communications Arctic fiber optic cable could benefit far flung Alaskans Archived January 11 2012 at the Wayback Machine Anchorage Daily News State of Alaska Workforce Profile Fiscal Year 2013 PDF Dop state ak us Archived from the original PDF on March 30 2014 Retrieved May 25 2014 a b c d About the Alaska Court System State ak us Archived from the original on September 13 2009 Retrieved June 2 2010 Leip David General Election Results Alaska United States Election Atlas Archived from the original on June 4 2011 Retrieved November 18 2016 National Journal Alaska State Profile Election nationaljournal com Archived from the original on November 15 2006 Retrieved June 2 2010 Volz Matt July 11 2006 Judge rules against Alaska marijuana law The Seattle Times Frank A Blethen Archived from the original on June 17 2008 Retrieved May 22 2008 Questions And Answers About Alaskan Independence Alaskan Independence Party 2006 Archived from the original on January 4 2012 Retrieved January 15 2012 Chappel Bill February 24 2015 Marijuana Is Now Legal in Alaska The 3rd U S State With Legal Pot Archived from the original on February 24 2015 Retrieved February 25 2015 Andrews Laurel Marijuana milestone Alaska s first pot shop opens to the public in Valdez Archived November 16 2016 at the Wayback Machine Alaska Dispatch News October 29 2016 Alaska Division of Elections CNN Money 2005 How tax friendly is your state Retrieved from CNN website Archived September 13 2017 at the Wayback Machine 12 states that have either no income or sales taxes Newsday Archived from the original on February 15 2019 Retrieved February 14 2019 Alaska Department of Revenue Tax state ak us Archived from the original on June 10 2010 Retrieved June 10 2010 How Friendly Is Your State s Tax System The Tax Foundation s 2014 State Business Tax Climate Index The Tax Foundation October 9 2013 Archived from the original on July 12 2010 Retrieved May 25 2014 Cohn Scott July 10 2018 Alaska Shackled with a Grave Budget Crisis is America s Worst State for Business CNBC Garber Jonathan May 8 2020 Plunging oil prices coronavirus fuel budget crisis in petroleum rich Alaska Fox Business J Pomante II Michael Li Quan December 15 2020 Cost of Voting in the American States 2020 Election Law Journal Rules Politics and Policy 19 4 503 509 doi 10 1089 elj 2020 0666 S2CID 225139517 Retrieved January 14 2022 Kitchenman Andrew November 17 2020 Alaska will have a new election system Voters pass Ballot Measure 2 KTOO Retrieved December 23 2020 a b Alaska Ballot Measure 2 Top Four Ranked Choice Voting and Campaign Finance Laws Initiative 2020 Ballotpedia Retrieved December 23 2020 External links EditAlaska at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Alaska at Curlie Alaska s Digital Archives Alaska Inter Tribal Council The short film Alaska 1967 is available for free download at the Internet Archive Geographic data related to Alaska at OpenStreetMap Who Owns Manages Alaska map Carl J Sacarlasen Diary Extracts at Dartmouth College Library M E Diemer Alaska Photographs at Dartmouth College Library Alfred Hulse Brooks Photographs and Papers Yale Collection of Western Americana Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library U S federal government Edit Alaska State Guide from the Library of Congress Energy amp Environmental Data for Alaska USGS real time geographic and other scientific resources of Alaska Archived December 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine US Census Bureau Alaska State Facts Alaska Statehood Subject Guide from the Eisenhower Presidential Library Archived November 13 2018 at the Wayback Machine Alaska Statehood documents Dwight D Eisenhower Presidential Library Archived July 21 2017 at the Wayback MachineAlaska state government Edit State of Alaska website Alaska State Databases Alaska Department of Natural Resources Recorder s Office Preceded byArizona List of U S states by date of admission to the UnionAdmitted on January 3 1959 49th Succeeded byHawaii Coordinates 64 N 152 W 64 N 152 W 64 152 State of Alaska Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alaska amp oldid 1133291389, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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