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Kodiak Island

Kodiak Island (Alutiiq: Qikertaq, Russian: Кадьяк) is a large island on the south coast of the U.S. state of Alaska, separated from the Alaska mainland by the Shelikof Strait. The largest island in the Kodiak Archipelago, Kodiak Island is the second largest island in the United States and the 80th largest island in the world, with an area of 3,595.09 sq mi (9,311.2 km2),[2] slightly larger than Cyprus. It is 160 km (99 miles) long and in width ranges from 16 to 97 kilometers (10 to 60 mi). Kodiak Island is the namesake for Kodiak Seamount, which lies off the coast at the Aleutian Trench. The largest community on the island is the city of Kodiak, Alaska.

Kodiak
Nickname: Emerald Isle[1]
Kodiak
Geography
LocationPacific Ocean
Coordinates57°28′N 153°26′W / 57.467°N 153.433°W / 57.467; -153.433
ArchipelagoKodiak Archipelago
Total islands25
Area3,595.09 sq mi (9,311.2 km2)
Highest elevation4,469 ft (1362.2 m)
Highest pointKoniag Peak
Administration
United States
StateAlaska
BoroughKodiak Island
Largest settlementKodiak (pop. 5,581)
Demographics
Population13,101 (2020 Census)
Pop. density3.64/sq mi (1.405/km2)
Ethnic groupsAlutiiq, European, Filipino
other Asian and Indigenous peoples,
Hispanics, including Filipino Hispanics
Additional information

Kodiak Island is mountainous and heavily forested in the north and east, but fairly treeless in the south. The island has many deep, ice-free bays that provide sheltered anchorages for boats. The southwestern two-thirds of the island, like much of the Kodiak Archipelago, is part of Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge.

Kodiak Island is part of the Kodiak Island Borough and Kodiak Archipelago of Alaska. The town of Kodiak is one of seven communities on Kodiak Island and is the island's main city. All commercial transportation between the island and the outside world goes through this city either via ferryboat or airline. Other settlements include the villages of Akhiok, Old Harbor, Karluk, Larsen Bay, Port Lions, and an unorganized community near Cape Chiniak. The village of Ouzinkie on nearby Spruce Island is also part of the island community.

Kodiak is also home to the largest U.S. Coast Guard base, which includes Coast Guard Base Kodiak, Coast Guard Air Station Kodiak, Communications Station Kodiak, and Aids to Navigation Station Kodiak. The island is also home to the Pacific Spaceport Complex.

The Kodiak bear and the king crab are native to the island. The fishing industry is the most important economic activity on the island; fisheries include Pacific salmon, Pacific halibut, and crab. The Karluk River is famous for its salmon run. Logging, ranching, numerous canneries, and some copper mining are also prevalent.

An antenna farm at the summit of Pillar Mountain above the city of Kodiak provides primary communications to and from the island.

History edit

 
Native artifacts from the Kodiak Islands, engraving c. 1805 from a Russian journal
 
Location of Three Saints Bay and St. Paul on Kodiak in 1805
 
Chart including Kodiak Island

Kodiak is the ancestral land of the Sugpiaq, an Alutiiq nation of Native Americans. The original inhabitants subsisted by hunting marine mammals, fishing, and gathering. Kodiak Island was explored in 1763 by Russian fur trader Stepan Glotov.

The first outsiders to settle on the island were Russian explorers under Grigory Shelikhov, a fur trader, who founded a Russian settlement on Kodiak Island at Three Saints Bay in 1784; the present-day village of Old Harbor developed near there.[3]: 162–163  In 1792, the settlement was moved to the site of present-day Kodiak and became the center of Russian fur trading with the Alaska Natives.

In 1793, Grigory Shelikhov, with the help of the governor-general of Irkutsk, was given twenty craftsmen and ten families of farmers with the obligation of paying government taxes for them, for promoting successful development of Russia-America settlements and the establishment of shipyards and factories.[4] The settlers provided to Shelikhov were not serfs in the full sense of the word. It was not possible to sell, mortgage, or give away the settlers; they were owned by the company for as long as the Shelikhov-Golikov Company existed.[4]

 
The settlement of Grigory Shelikhov on Kodiak Island.

In 1784, Shelikhov, along with 130 Russian fur traders, massacred (see Awa'uq Massacre) several hundred Qik’rtarmiut Sugpiat ("Sugpiaq people of Qik’rtaq/Kodiak") tribe of Alutiiq men, women and children at Refuge Rock, a tiny stack island off the eastern coast of Sitkalidak Island. In Alutiiq, this sacred place is now known as Awa'uq, "to become numb".[5]

The Alutiiq were conscripted by the Russian occupants for the purpose of hunting, gathering, and processing food and furs.[6] Native labor was commandeered through hostage taking, physical threat, and punishment.[7] The Alutiiq men were forced to obtain quotas of otter pelts and bird skins which were then stitched into waterproof parkas by the Alutiiq women.[7] The waterproof garments, made by the Alutiiq women, were given to the Alutiiq men as payment for the furs brought to the Russian fur traders.[7]

The Orthodox mission in Russian America was authorized by Catherine II in 1793, and then was established on Kodiak Island in 1794 by a group of monks from the Valaam Monastery in Saint Petersburg.[8]

The Russian fur traders radically expanded sea otter hunting operations and forced the Alutiiq men to hunt for longer periods of time at increasingly distant areas as the local population of fur-bearing animals was extinguished.[7] The Alutiiq suffered starvation and physical separation of families because of the able-bodied men hunting and trapping furs rather than providing food for the women, young, old, and sick as they had done traditionally.[9]

In 1837-1839, a smallpox epidemic swept through all the Russian America territory and destroyed an estimated one-third of the Native population.[7] The remaining Alutiiq on Kodiak Island were then consolidated into seven settlements where they were more readily offered medical, educational, and religious services by the Russian-American Company.[7] The smallpox epidemic was eventually stopped with vaccination of the natives.[9]

Following the 1867 Alaska purchase by the United States, the island became part of the United States. Gradually Americans settled there, also engaging in hunting and fishing.

1912 Novarupta eruption edit

Novarupta is a volcano 100 miles (160 km) northwest of Kodiak Island that erupted from June 6 to June 8, 1912: the largest eruption in the 20th century. Life on Kodiak Island was immobilized during the 60-hour eruption. Darkness and suffocating conditions caused by the falling ash and sulfur dioxide gas rendered villagers helpless with sore eyes and respiratory problems. Water became undrinkable. Radio communications were disrupted and visibility was nil. Roofs in the village collapsed under the weight of more than a foot of ash. Buildings were destroyed as avalanches of ash rushed down from nearby hillsides.[10][11]

On June 9, Kodiak villagers saw the first clear, ash-free skies in three days, but their environment had changed dramatically. Wildlife on Kodiak Island was devastated by ash and acid rain from the eruption. Bears and other large animals were blinded by thick ash, and many starved to death because large numbers of plants and small animals were smothered in the eruption. Birds blinded and coated by volcanic ash fell to the ground. Even the region's prolific mosquitoes were exterminated. Aquatic organisms in the region perished in the ash-clogged waters. Salmon in all stages of life were destroyed by the eruption and its aftereffects. From 1915 to 1919, southwestern Alaska's salmon-fishing industry was devastated.[12]

1964 earthquake edit

The island was also hit by the 1964 Good Friday earthquake and tsunami, which destroyed much of the waterfront, the business district, and several villages.[13]

Climate edit

 
Snows cling to the mountaintops in summer

The weather of Kodiak is temperate by Alaskan standards. December to March is the cold season while June to August is the summer season.[14]

Climate data for Kodiak, Alaska
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 54
(12)
60
(16)
57
(14)
70
(21)
80
(27)
86
(30)
82
(28)
84
(29)
80
(27)
74
(23)
60
(16)
62
(17)
86
(30)
Average high °F (°C) 35
(2)
36
(2)
38
(3)
43
(6)
49
(9)
55
(13)
60
(16)
61
(16)
56
(13)
46
(8)
39
(4)
36
(2)
46
(8)
Average low °F (°C) 25
(−4)
24
(−4)
27
(−3)
32
(0)
38
(3)
44
(7)
48
(9)
49
(9)
43
(6)
34
(1)
29
(−2)
25
(−4)
35
(2)
Record low °F (°C) −16
(−27)
−12
(−24)
−6
(−21)
7
(−14)
18
(−8)
30
(−1)
35
(2)
34
(1)
26
(−3)
7
(−14)
0
(−18)
−9
(−23)
−16
(−27)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 8.17
(208)
5.72
(145)
5.22
(133)
5.48
(139)
6.31
(160)
5.38
(137)
4.12
(105)
4.48
(114)
7.84
(199)
8.36
(212)
6.63
(168)
7.64
(194)
75.35
(1,914)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 14.5
(37)
14.7
(37)
10.3
(26)
7.5
(19)
0.2
(0.51)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
1.4
(3.6)
7.3
(19)
15.6
(40)
71.5
(182.11)
Source: [14]

Education edit

The University of Alaska Anchorage has a 50-acre (20-hectare) campus which opened in 1968, located about 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) northwest of the City of Kodiak.[15]

Parks and protected areas edit

 
Kodiak bear cub, perched on a sign

Nearly two-thirds of the island is located within the Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge and has no road access. Refuge headquarters are located on the Chiniak Highway, right at the access road for the Buskin River State Recreation Site, which has camping, picnic areas, beaches, and fishing for salmon and trout in the Buskin River.[16]

The Pasagshak River State Recreation Site is a 25 acres (10 ha) park with a small campground and access to some of the island's best salmon and trout fishing.[17] The island is also home to the Fort Abercrombie State Historical Park.

References edit

  1. ^ "Kodiak". Alaska Magazine. Retrieved August 28, 2013.
  2. ^ Dunham, Mike (July 31, 2010). . Anchorage Daily News. Archived from the original on August 2, 2010. Retrieved August 1, 2010.
  3. ^ Brown, S.R., 2009, Merchant Kings, New York:St. Martin's Press, ISBN 9780312616113
  4. ^ a b Grinëv, Andrei (2013). "The First Russian Settlers in Alaska". Historian. 75 (3): 443–474. doi:10.1111/hisn.12012. S2CID 143015531.
  5. ^ Ben Fitzhugh (2003), The Evolution of Complex Hunter-Gatherers: Archaeological Evidence from the North Pacific, Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York, 2003
  6. ^ Etnier, Michael A.; Partlow, Megan A.; Foster, Nora R. (February 2016). "Alutiiq Subsistence Economy at Igvak, a Russian-American Artel in the Kodiak Archipelago". Arctic Anthropology. 53 (2): 52–68. doi:10.3368/aa.53.2.52. S2CID 164846300.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Margaris, Amy V.; Rusk, Mark A.; Saltonstall, Patrick G.; Odell, Molly (2015). "Cod Fishing in Russian America: The Archaeology of a 19th-Century Alutiiq Work Camp on Alaska's Kodiak Island". Arctic Anthropology. 52 (1): 102–126. doi:10.3368/aa.52.1.102. S2CID 162418622.
  8. ^ Danver, Steven L. (2017). "The Orthodox Church in Russian America: Colonization and Missions to Alaska's Native Peoples". Journal of the West. 56 (2): 2–8.
  9. ^ a b Bland, Richard L. (2015). "SMALLPOX, ALEUTS, AND KAYAKS: A TRANSLATION EDUARD BLASHKE'S ARTICLE ON HIS TRIP THROUGH THE ALEUTIAN ISLANDS IN 1838". Journal of Northwest Anthropology. 49 (1): 71–86.
  10. ^   This article incorporates public domain material from Jennifer Adleman (Winter 2002). "The Great Eruption of 1912". Alaska Park Science. National Park Service.
  11. ^ Fierstein, Judy; Hildreth, Wes (2001). "Preliminary volcano-hazard assessment for the Katmai volcanic cluster, Alaska". U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report OF 00-0489: 59.
  12. ^ Fierstein, Judy; Hildreth, Wes; Hendley, J. W. II.; Stauffer, P. H. (1998). "Can another great volcanic eruption happen in Alaska?". U.S. Geological Survey Fact Sheet FS 0075-98.
  13. ^ . Explore Kodiak History & Culture. Kodiak Island Convention & Visitors Bureau. Archived from the original on 2015-01-02. Retrieved 2010-11-25.
  14. ^ a b "Intellicast - Kodiak Historic Weather Averages in Alaska (99615)". www.intellicast.com. Retrieved 2018-09-20.
  15. ^ Kodiak College
  16. ^ The Milepost, 2018 edition, page 578, ISBN 9781892154378
  17. ^ Pasagshak River SRS, Alaska Department of Natural Resources

External links edit

  • Official Kodiak Island website
  • Reconnaissance Geologic Map of Kodiak Island and Adjacent Islands, Alaska United States Geological Survey
  • Kodiak management area salmon daily and cumulative escapement counts for river systems with fish weirs, 1997-2006, and peak indexed escapement counts, 2006 / by Iris O. Caldentey.

kodiak, island, alutiiq, qikertaq, russian, Кадьяк, large, island, south, coast, state, alaska, separated, from, alaska, mainland, shelikof, strait, largest, island, kodiak, archipelago, second, largest, island, united, states, 80th, largest, island, world, wi. Kodiak Island Alutiiq Qikertaq Russian Kadyak is a large island on the south coast of the U S state of Alaska separated from the Alaska mainland by the Shelikof Strait The largest island in the Kodiak Archipelago Kodiak Island is the second largest island in the United States and the 80th largest island in the world with an area of 3 595 09 sq mi 9 311 2 km2 2 slightly larger than Cyprus It is 160 km 99 miles long and in width ranges from 16 to 97 kilometers 10 to 60 mi Kodiak Island is the namesake for Kodiak Seamount which lies off the coast at the Aleutian Trench The largest community on the island is the city of Kodiak Alaska KodiakNickname Emerald Isle 1 KodiakGeographyLocationPacific OceanCoordinates57 28 N 153 26 W 57 467 N 153 433 W 57 467 153 433ArchipelagoKodiak ArchipelagoTotal islands25Area3 595 09 sq mi 9 311 2 km2 Highest elevation4 469 ft 1362 2 m Highest pointKoniag PeakAdministrationUnited StatesStateAlaskaBoroughKodiak IslandLargest settlementKodiak pop 5 581 DemographicsPopulation13 101 2020 Census Pop density3 64 sq mi 1 405 km2 Ethnic groupsAlutiiq European Filipino other Asian and Indigenous peoples Hispanics including Filipino HispanicsAdditional informationKodiak Island is mountainous and heavily forested in the north and east but fairly treeless in the south The island has many deep ice free bays that provide sheltered anchorages for boats The southwestern two thirds of the island like much of the Kodiak Archipelago is part of Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge Kodiak Island is part of the Kodiak Island Borough and Kodiak Archipelago of Alaska The town of Kodiak is one of seven communities on Kodiak Island and is the island s main city All commercial transportation between the island and the outside world goes through this city either via ferryboat or airline Other settlements include the villages of Akhiok Old Harbor Karluk Larsen Bay Port Lions and an unorganized community near Cape Chiniak The village of Ouzinkie on nearby Spruce Island is also part of the island community Kodiak is also home to the largest U S Coast Guard base which includes Coast Guard Base Kodiak Coast Guard Air Station Kodiak Communications Station Kodiak and Aids to Navigation Station Kodiak The island is also home to the Pacific Spaceport Complex The Kodiak bear and the king crab are native to the island The fishing industry is the most important economic activity on the island fisheries include Pacific salmon Pacific halibut and crab The Karluk River is famous for its salmon run Logging ranching numerous canneries and some copper mining are also prevalent An antenna farm at the summit of Pillar Mountain above the city of Kodiak provides primary communications to and from the island Contents 1 History 1 1 1912 Novarupta eruption 1 2 1964 earthquake 2 Climate 3 Education 4 Parks and protected areas 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp Native artifacts from the Kodiak Islands engraving c 1805 from a Russian journal nbsp Location of Three Saints Bay and St Paul on Kodiak in 1805 nbsp Chart including Kodiak IslandKodiak is the ancestral land of the Sugpiaq an Alutiiq nation of Native Americans The original inhabitants subsisted by hunting marine mammals fishing and gathering Kodiak Island was explored in 1763 by Russian fur trader Stepan Glotov The first outsiders to settle on the island were Russian explorers under Grigory Shelikhov a fur trader who founded a Russian settlement on Kodiak Island at Three Saints Bay in 1784 the present day village of Old Harbor developed near there 3 162 163 In 1792 the settlement was moved to the site of present day Kodiak and became the center of Russian fur trading with the Alaska Natives In 1793 Grigory Shelikhov with the help of the governor general of Irkutsk was given twenty craftsmen and ten families of farmers with the obligation of paying government taxes for them for promoting successful development of Russia America settlements and the establishment of shipyards and factories 4 The settlers provided to Shelikhov were not serfs in the full sense of the word It was not possible to sell mortgage or give away the settlers they were owned by the company for as long as the Shelikhov Golikov Company existed 4 nbsp The settlement of Grigory Shelikhov on Kodiak Island In 1784 Shelikhov along with 130 Russian fur traders massacred see Awa uq Massacre several hundred Qik rtarmiut Sugpiat Sugpiaq people of Qik rtaq Kodiak tribe of Alutiiq men women and children at Refuge Rock a tiny stack island off the eastern coast of Sitkalidak Island In Alutiiq this sacred place is now known as Awa uq to become numb 5 The Alutiiq were conscripted by the Russian occupants for the purpose of hunting gathering and processing food and furs 6 Native labor was commandeered through hostage taking physical threat and punishment 7 The Alutiiq men were forced to obtain quotas of otter pelts and bird skins which were then stitched into waterproof parkas by the Alutiiq women 7 The waterproof garments made by the Alutiiq women were given to the Alutiiq men as payment for the furs brought to the Russian fur traders 7 The Orthodox mission in Russian America was authorized by Catherine II in 1793 and then was established on Kodiak Island in 1794 by a group of monks from the Valaam Monastery in Saint Petersburg 8 The Russian fur traders radically expanded sea otter hunting operations and forced the Alutiiq men to hunt for longer periods of time at increasingly distant areas as the local population of fur bearing animals was extinguished 7 The Alutiiq suffered starvation and physical separation of families because of the able bodied men hunting and trapping furs rather than providing food for the women young old and sick as they had done traditionally 9 In 1837 1839 a smallpox epidemic swept through all the Russian America territory and destroyed an estimated one third of the Native population 7 The remaining Alutiiq on Kodiak Island were then consolidated into seven settlements where they were more readily offered medical educational and religious services by the Russian American Company 7 The smallpox epidemic was eventually stopped with vaccination of the natives 9 Following the 1867 Alaska purchase by the United States the island became part of the United States Gradually Americans settled there also engaging in hunting and fishing 1912 Novarupta eruption edit Novarupta is a volcano 100 miles 160 km northwest of Kodiak Island that erupted from June 6 to June 8 1912 the largest eruption in the 20th century Life on Kodiak Island was immobilized during the 60 hour eruption Darkness and suffocating conditions caused by the falling ash and sulfur dioxide gas rendered villagers helpless with sore eyes and respiratory problems Water became undrinkable Radio communications were disrupted and visibility was nil Roofs in the village collapsed under the weight of more than a foot of ash Buildings were destroyed as avalanches of ash rushed down from nearby hillsides 10 11 On June 9 Kodiak villagers saw the first clear ash free skies in three days but their environment had changed dramatically Wildlife on Kodiak Island was devastated by ash and acid rain from the eruption Bears and other large animals were blinded by thick ash and many starved to death because large numbers of plants and small animals were smothered in the eruption Birds blinded and coated by volcanic ash fell to the ground Even the region s prolific mosquitoes were exterminated Aquatic organisms in the region perished in the ash clogged waters Salmon in all stages of life were destroyed by the eruption and its aftereffects From 1915 to 1919 southwestern Alaska s salmon fishing industry was devastated 12 1964 earthquake edit The island was also hit by the 1964 Good Friday earthquake and tsunami which destroyed much of the waterfront the business district and several villages 13 Climate edit nbsp Snows cling to the mountaintops in summerThe weather of Kodiak is temperate by Alaskan standards December to March is the cold season while June to August is the summer season 14 Climate data for Kodiak AlaskaMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 54 12 60 16 57 14 70 21 80 27 86 30 82 28 84 29 80 27 74 23 60 16 62 17 86 30 Average high F C 35 2 36 2 38 3 43 6 49 9 55 13 60 16 61 16 56 13 46 8 39 4 36 2 46 8 Average low F C 25 4 24 4 27 3 32 0 38 3 44 7 48 9 49 9 43 6 34 1 29 2 25 4 35 2 Record low F C 16 27 12 24 6 21 7 14 18 8 30 1 35 2 34 1 26 3 7 14 0 18 9 23 16 27 Average precipitation inches mm 8 17 208 5 72 145 5 22 133 5 48 139 6 31 160 5 38 137 4 12 105 4 48 114 7 84 199 8 36 212 6 63 168 7 64 194 75 35 1 914 Average snowfall inches cm 14 5 37 14 7 37 10 3 26 7 5 19 0 2 0 51 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 3 6 7 3 19 15 6 40 71 5 182 11 Source 14 Education editThe University of Alaska Anchorage has a 50 acre 20 hectare campus which opened in 1968 located about 2 miles 3 2 kilometers northwest of the City of Kodiak 15 Parks and protected areas edit nbsp Kodiak bear cub perched on a signNearly two thirds of the island is located within the Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge and has no road access Refuge headquarters are located on the Chiniak Highway right at the access road for the Buskin River State Recreation Site which has camping picnic areas beaches and fishing for salmon and trout in the Buskin River 16 The Pasagshak River State Recreation Site is a 25 acres 10 ha park with a small campground and access to some of the island s best salmon and trout fishing 17 The island is also home to the Fort Abercrombie State Historical Park References edit Kodiak Alaska Magazine Retrieved August 28 2013 Dunham Mike July 31 2010 Turns out Kodiak is largest U S island depending on viewpoint Anchorage Daily News Archived from the original on August 2 2010 Retrieved August 1 2010 Brown S R 2009 Merchant Kings New York St Martin s Press ISBN 9780312616113 a b Grinev Andrei 2013 The First Russian Settlers in Alaska Historian 75 3 443 474 doi 10 1111 hisn 12012 S2CID 143015531 Ben Fitzhugh 2003 The Evolution of Complex Hunter Gatherers Archaeological Evidence from the North Pacific Kluwer Academic Plenum Publishers New York 2003 Etnier Michael A Partlow Megan A Foster Nora R February 2016 Alutiiq Subsistence Economy at Igvak a Russian American Artel in the Kodiak Archipelago Arctic Anthropology 53 2 52 68 doi 10 3368 aa 53 2 52 S2CID 164846300 a b c d e f Margaris Amy V Rusk Mark A Saltonstall Patrick G Odell Molly 2015 Cod Fishing in Russian America The Archaeology of a 19th Century Alutiiq Work Camp on Alaska s Kodiak Island Arctic Anthropology 52 1 102 126 doi 10 3368 aa 52 1 102 S2CID 162418622 Danver Steven L 2017 The Orthodox Church in Russian America Colonization and Missions to Alaska s Native Peoples Journal of the West 56 2 2 8 a b Bland Richard L 2015 SMALLPOX ALEUTS AND KAYAKS A TRANSLATION EDUARD BLASHKE S ARTICLE ON HIS TRIP THROUGH THE ALEUTIAN ISLANDS IN 1838 Journal of Northwest Anthropology 49 1 71 86 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Jennifer Adleman Winter 2002 The Great Eruption of 1912 Alaska Park Science National Park Service Fierstein Judy Hildreth Wes 2001 Preliminary volcano hazard assessment for the Katmai volcanic cluster Alaska U S Geological Survey Open File Report OF 00 0489 59 Fierstein Judy Hildreth Wes Hendley J W II Stauffer P H 1998 Can another great volcanic eruption happen in Alaska U S Geological Survey Fact Sheet FS 0075 98 1964 Earthquake amp Tidal Wave Explore Kodiak History amp Culture Kodiak Island Convention amp Visitors Bureau Archived from the original on 2015 01 02 Retrieved 2010 11 25 a b Intellicast Kodiak Historic Weather Averages in Alaska 99615 www intellicast com Retrieved 2018 09 20 Kodiak College The Milepost 2018 edition page 578 ISBN 9781892154378 Pasagshak River SRS Alaska Department of Natural ResourcesExternal links editKodiak Island at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage Official Kodiak Island website Reconnaissance Geologic Map of Kodiak Island and Adjacent Islands Alaska United States Geological Survey Kodiak management area salmon daily and cumulative escapement counts for river systems with fish weirs 1997 2006 and peak indexed escapement counts 2006 by Iris O Caldentey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kodiak Island amp oldid 1180679694, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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