copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
The Upper Tanana Dene - University Press of Colorado " This book is the most comprehensive source on the people, cultural beliefs, land use, and ethnohistory of the Tanacross and Upper Tanana Dene language areas "
The Lost Gold Mine of the Upper Tanana - Alaska- Paul Solka Jr. - 1994 Book The Lost Gold Mine of the Upper Tanana - Alaska- Paul Solka Jr Book Very interesting softcover book, 49 pages Please see photos Thanks Items in the Price Guide are obtained exclusively from licensors and partners solely for our members’ research needs
The Upper Tanana Dene: People of This Land - amazon. com As young Dene migrate to towns and cities far from their homeland on the upper Tanana River of east central Alaska, they may never learn what it was like living from the land
Lost Gold Mine of the Upper Tanana Alaska. . with Maps! You are bidding on a very hard to find limited printing book called The Lost Gold Mine of the Upper Tanana by Paul Solka, published in small numbers by the Pioneers of Alaska Igloo #4 Foundation in 1994
Treasure Legends - Alaska | TreasureNet. com Tanana West of Tolovana River Nome Citizens Search For Lost Ship with Bullion onboard 1917 GOLD STRIKE RICHER THAN KLONDYKE - location a mystery! You must log in or register to post here
97-159-01 Lost Gold Mine of Felix Pedro Inside Outside series KUAC Pedro told him about his long search for gold on the Tanana Slope Pedro had found gold on the Goodpaster drainage He went to C rcle for food, but was not able to find his mine when he re urned Pedro’s inability to find the mine was due to map errors The errors came about when a party of five led by Lt Henry T Allen floated d
The Upper Tanana Dene: People of This Land on JSTOR This book is about Northern Dene who live in the upper Tanana region of east-central Alaska It is based largely on interviews with Dene elders born in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries It is a link to their experiences, their lives, and their understanding of the world