Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
10/31/11

The Alaska History Store at the University of Alaska Fairbanks will host its annual holiday historical photograph reprint sale Friday and Saturday, Nov. 4-5.

The sale will run 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Kayak Room in Rasmuson Library on the UAF campus.

The sale will allow the public to purchase reproductions of historic Alaska photographs, panoramas, rare maps and notecards, as well as a 2012 calendar with some of the most-requested images.

Proceeds benefit the work of the Alaska and Polar Regions Collections at Rasmuson Library. More information is available online at www.alaskahistorystore.org or call 907-474-6344.

ON THE WEB: www.alaskahistorystore.org

NW/10-31-11/100-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On November - 1 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Blockhouse

UAF photo by Theresa Bakker
The Kolmakovsky blockhouse sits on its new foundation behind the University of Alaska Museum of the North. The structure has a new sod roof.

Theresa Bakker
907-474-6941
10/28/11

An 1841 Russian blockhouse is again sitting tall on the grounds of the University of Alaska Museum of the North.

The roof was removed from the Kolmakovsky blockhouse in 2006 due to questions of structural stability and safety. In December of 2009, the Save America’s Treasures Program awarded the museum $75,000 to preserve the Kolmakovsky collection. After relocating the building to a tree-sheltered site on a new foundation and replacing a number of rotten logs, the preservation team completed the work on the blockhouse this fall by reattaching an updated roof outfitted with tundra sod and tamarack poles.

“We used materials with rot-resistant properties to help the long-term preservation of the building,” said Angela Linn, the museum’s ethnology and history collection manager.

The blockhouse was the first structure built by the Russian-American Company at Kolmakovsky Redoubt near Aniak. It is one of the oldest Russian-era structures in Alaska. In 1929, the blockhouse was disassembled and moved to Fairbanks.

For this project, Linn worked closely with log preservation specialist Sandy Jamieson. He was especially intrigued with the unique notching system used in the blockhouse construction. The design features self-locking dovetail notches built into the chinkless white spruce logs, something he had never seen before.

“It was very satisfying to reassemble the building,” Jamieson said. “Everything just went together – click, click, click. It was a nice connection to the guys who had cut those logs 170 years ago.”

Linn hopes to use the information the team gathered about the blockhouse’s architectural design in future projects. “There’s a whole story embedded in the logs themselves,” Linn said.

Blockhouse

UAF photo by Theresa Bakker
The yearlong project to relocate and preserve the Kolmakovsky blockhouse was funded by a Save America's Treasures grant.

The blockhouse and approximately 5,000 archaeological artifacts from the site help document the period in Alaska history when outsiders were first coming into contact with the Native population. The artifacts represent almost 90 years of occupation at the Kolmakovsky site from the original Russian traders to the American employees of the Alaska Commercial Company, which operated at Kolmakovsky from 1867 until 1917.

The Save America’s Treasures grant, a joint initiative of the National Park Service, the Institute of Museum and Library Services, the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities, also provided funding to improve the storage for these artifacts and to make them more accessible to researchers.

“For me, as an anthropologist, the objects are great in and of themselves, but what’s really intriguing are those stories associated with the objects,” Linn said.

Putting the roof back on the blockhouse was the last step in stabilizing the building, but it’s just the beginning of the museum’s plans for the Kolmakovsky collection. New interpretive panels will be built to explain the building’s role in the culture and history of Alaska, and the structure will serve as the trailhead marker to a planned interpretive trail on campus.

Linn will soon have two houses to take care of when the St. Michael blockhouse returns to Fairbanks after being on loan to the Anchorage Museum since the 1980s.

“These objects keep people aware of this time period. We are achieving our goal of outreach and education by sharing them with the public,” said Linn.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Angela Linn, museum ethnology and history collection manager, at 907-474-1828 or via e-mail at [email protected].

ON THE WEB: museum.uaf.edu

NOTE TO EDITORS: Images of the blockhouse are available for download from www.uafnews.com.

TB/10-28-11/099-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On October - 29 - 2011 3 COMMENTS

Rob Harper
907-451-2990
10/28/11

The 2011 Alaska Asphalt Pavement Summit, slated for Oct. 31-Nov. 1 in Anchorage, will bring nearly 300 transportation professionals from around the world to discuss ways to make pavement last longer and cost less in Alaska and other cold regions.

Few places in the United States pose the unique combination of transportation challenges: permafrost, frozen ground, extreme ice and moisture erosion, and rapid surface deterioration due to harsh climates.

Attendees and presenters include highly-specialized state and international specialists:  engineers, planners, researchers and leaders from government, academia and private industry in Alaska, the Lower 48 and countries dealing with similar cold-climate issues.

“This event is about leveraging the diverse expertise of many different fields to try and solve our pavement preservation challenges,” said Billy Connor, director of the Alaska University Transportation Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks Institute of Northern Engineering.

The event will take place in the third-floor ballroom at the Dena’ina Convention Center in Anchorage from 11:30 a.m. – 5 p.m. Monday. Oct. 31 and 7:30 a.m. – 5 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 1.

Presentations will address topics such as methods of making stronger warm mix asphalt, recycled asphalt applications and the use of thermal imaging on the Seward Highway. Innovations like these are helping improve asphalt in ways that help save money and protect the environment. In Alaska, for example, warm-mix asphalt requires less fuel for production and creates lower emissions than hot-mix.

“Together we can figure out how to make longer-lasting pavement to reduce maintenance costs, and improve safety,” says Angela Parsons, research and development engineer for the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities.

The State of Alaska spends up to $140 million a year on surface maintenance. That figure does not include the money local governments spend on their roads. On average, Alaskans drive up to 4.9 billion miles per year, an average of 7,600 miles per person each year. AUTC studies estimate that every dollar not spent on road maintenance costs the public three dollars due to things like vehicle damage and maintenance, insurance claims and increased premiums, and wasted gas from congestion.

“With asphalt in Alaska, the dollar you spend today on maintenance is ten dollars you will save down the road on repairs, replacement, or safety issues,” said Mike Coffey, statewide maintenance and operations chief for DOT&PF.

The summit’s primary sponsors are the Alaska University Transportation Center and the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities.

An event agenda is available online at http://bit.ly/AUTCpavement.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Mike Coffey, DOT&PF statewide maintenance and operations chief, 907-465-3904, 907-978-9039 or [email protected]. Billy Connor, AUTC director, 907 474-5552, 907-460-0061 or [email protected]. Angela Parsons, DOT&PF research and development engineer, 907-269-6208, 907-350-6997 or [email protected]

ON THE WEB: http://ine.uaf.edu/autc/

NOTE TO EDITORS: On-site interviews with presenters and/or attendees can be prearranged by contacting Rob Harper at 907-451-2990 or via mobile phone at 406-249-7672. The event is open to both the public and any interested media.

RH/10-28-11/098-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On October - 29 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Nancy Tarnai
907-474-5042

Oct. 24 attracted a huge crowd to the UAF Wood Center for a taste of Food Day.

“It’s all about healthy eating and supporting local, sustainable agriculture,” said Nancy Tarnai of the event planning team. “We couldn’t be more pleased with the interest and excitement.”

Plate of reindeer.

Photo by Nancy Tarnai
Carol Lewis displays the reindeer loin she cooked upstairs in the Wood Center kitchen. The meat, high in protein and low in fat, is raised at the Fairbanks Experiment Farm.

The morning kicked off with the “Iron Chef” Surf vs. Turf Cookoff Challenge, highlighting the culinary talents of Carol Lewis, dean of the School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences, and Michael Castellini, dean of the School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences. Lewis was assisted by professional chef, Michael Roddey of the Community and Technical College culinary school, and Castellini by professional chef, Dave Sikorski of NANA Management Services.

Judges Shelley McCool, Sarah McConnell and Tyler Skrivanek had the tough job of deciding which chef would get to take home the Iron Chef birch spatula. Based on appearance, taste, presentation, timeliness and nutritional quality, the judges chose Castellini and his shrimp dish by a very narrow margin. It was a close call between the shrimp and Lewis’s reindeer. Judges’ comments included: “Yum. This reindeer is tender and tasty,” (McConnell); “It’s all fantastic,” (McCool); “It’s all delicious,” (Skrivanek).

“It’s a kaleidoscope of tastes,” McConnell summed up.

Emcee Jerry Evans of KUAC hosted the cookoff. Special thanks to the farmers who donated food for the event, including the scrumptions microgreens brought in that morning by Bill Johnson of Johnson Family Farms.

The Food Jeopardy game was a heated competition between academics Andrea Bersamin and Bret Luick and farmers Mike Emers and Jeff Johnson. The competitors answered questions about food, nutrition and Alaska agriculture, with post-doctoral fellow Thomas Grant playing the role of game show host. In the end Luick took home a gorgeous basket of produce from ChenaFresh.

Iron chefs bask in award.

Photo by Nancy Tarnai
All smiles after winning the Iron Chef cookoff, Dean Michael Castellini, at right, accepts the award from KUAC's Jerry Evans. In the center is NANA Chef Dave Sikorski.

Over 20 exhibitors from the Alaska Community Agriculture Association to Homegrown Market to UAF Cooperative Extension Service displayed information and talked to attendees. The Anthropology Society hosted lectures and films.

Perhaps the most popular segment was the Taste of Alaska, a feast of Alaska Grown food donated by farmers and prepared by UAF Dining Services/NANA Management Services. Taking grass-fed beef from the Matanuska Experiment Farm, cold-smoked salmon from Alex Oliveira in Kodiak, honey from Charlie Knight, lettuce and tomatoes from Chena Fresh, apples and potatoes from the Fairbanks Experiment Farm, rutabagas from Grey Owl Garden, beets, cabbage, carrots, Napa cabbage from Spinach Creek Farm and cabbage, carrots, onions and beets from Wild Rose Farm, the chefs prepared appetizers, soups, stews, roasted vegetables and vegetable medleys.

There was much buzz about the food and great interest in the fact that it was all grown in Alaska.

As Food Day will be celebrated on Oct. 24 from now on, please mark your calendars now for future years!

Around the nation, Food Day reported a massive celebration in Times Square, a conference on food deserts in San Francisco, the serving of healthy breakfasts in Omaha, a food-safety wheel in Chicago, the building of raised bed gardens in Little Rock and much more.

For more photos visit the School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences Blog.

Posted by Nikki Withington On October - 28 - 2011 1 COMMENT

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
10/26/11

The University of Alaska Fairbanks Office of International Programs and Initiatives will host two presentations Thursday, Nov. 3 by Jonathan Adelman, an international affairs expert from University of Denver.

Adelman will meet with UAF students in the afternoon at the Honors House on Copper Lane. The presentation, “Emerging China, Russia and Israel: What it Really Means for Traveling Millennials,” is co-hosted by the UAF Honors Program.

Adelman’s second lecture “Emerging China and Russia: Impacts and Awareness for Alaska and Alaskans” is free and open to the public. It will take place in the Wood Center Ballroom from 6:30 – 8 p.m.

Adelman is a professor in the Graduate School of International Studies at the University of Denver. He received his doctorate from Columbia University in 1976 and has been published numerous times regarding international affairs. He has worked with the U.S. State Department and served as doctoral dissertation advisor to former National Security Advisor and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. He currently is a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies in Washington D.C.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Brandon Ilgen at 907-474-7157 or [email protected].

NOTE TO EDITORS: Journalists wishing to cover Adelman’s meeting with students can do so, though that event is not open to the public due to space constraints. The meeting runs from noon-2 p.m. Adelman is also available for advance interviews by emailing [email protected].

NW/10-26-11/097-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On October - 28 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

 Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
10/26/11

The 21st annual Dead Writers Reading and Raffle will be Friday, Oct. 28 at 6 p.m. at the Blue Loon.

Members of the public are invited to come dressed as their favorite dead writer, give a three-minute reading and compete for prizes. Audience members are also welcome. You must be 21 or older to attend.

The event is a fundraiser for the University of Alaska Fairbanks English Department’s Midnight Sun Visiting Writers Series.

Tickets are $15 at the door for general admission and $12 with a UAF PolarExpress card.

 CONTACT: Christie VanLaningham at 907-750-3678 or [email protected].

SCU/10-26-11/096psa-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On October - 28 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Ned Rozell
907-474-7468
10/27/2011

In Alan Weisman’s book, The World Without Us, the author ponders “a world from which we all suddenly vanished. Tomorrow.”

In last week’s column, a few experts discussed the fate of Alaska structures if Alaskans were to disappear. This week, people who study Alaska’s wildlife donate some thought to the subject.

Alaska’s lack of people has benefited many species, including caribou, which still outnumber Alaskans, and salmon, which torpedo up our rivers with a staggering, wonderful density that was once seen all over the west coast of North America.

Bird

Photo by Ned Rozell
Songbirds like this ruby-crowned kinglet would probably do better if people flew away.

Mark Wipfli has spent many hours on salmon streams throughout Alaska, and the University of Alaska biologist has thought many times of mankind’s impact on salmon. If people were to disappear, Wipfli envisions a slow healing of damage done to salmon habitat. In Alaska, that means the recovery from logging and mining of streamside forests that provide everything from fish food in the form of insects to the contribution of dead trees to waterways (for erosion control and creation of eddies and other features good for salmon).

Old-growth forests (with trees aged from 50 to 200 years) provide ideal conditions for salmon, just as those same trees have benefited us with stout building materials. The mining of minerals we use every day has also disrupted life for salmon.

“If we vanished . . . there would no longer be harvesting or overharvesting,” Wipfli said. “Mining impacts to watersheds would slowly diminish, but would probably take a lot longer. And dams would eventually crumble and tumble, allowing rivers to flow like they once did.”

The bottom line is salmon ‹ and the marine, freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems that support, them would be better off without us,” he said. “We continue to create barriers and stressors that collectively make it more difficult for salmon to thrive like they historically did, especially in the Lower 48.”

Along a robust population of salmon, Alaska also is not yet experiencing a bird shortage.

“Birds from six of the seven continents come to Alaska to breed each year ‹ that’s billions and billions of birds,” said biologist Sue Guers of the Alaska Bird Observatory in Fairbanks. “These numbers are estimates from now. Imagine what it was like before our time.”

Alaska’s many million acres of unpeopled river valleys and tundra plains would continue to attract birds if we were gone, but some species would miss us, Guers said. Ravens and gray jays that pick at what we leave behind in cities and towns would revert back to following wolf packs, and the pigeons that live in Fairbanks might find life impossible at 40 below without the warm exhaust of heated buildings.

“Most other species would most likely benefit from humans disappearing,” Guers said. “Think about all the habitat destruction going on in the Lower 48 and in Central and South America ‹ loss of habitat is one of the major causes of species loss and biodiversity.”

As years passed without humanity, nature will take down other bird barriers, including wind turbines, cellphone towers, and what Wiesman cited as mankind’s most damaging invention to birds, window glass. But he also wrote that housecats, the expert hunters that kill billions of songbirds worldwide each year, would do quite well without us.

Large mammals like moose and caribou on far-away hilltops might not miss us at all, said biologist Tom Paragi with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

“I don’t think the remote portions of Alaska would be much different than we see today, because of intact habitats,” Paragi said. “In contrast, if you Œre-wilded’ Iowa or Manhattan, you’d have smaller populations of white-tailed deer and raccoons after wolves, bears and cougars come back.”

One of the biggest differences between Alaska and the rest of the world is that we have cleared so little of the landscape for farming here, Paragi said. That has allowed moose their willows and caribou their lichen, as well as the space to breed and move around.

Hunters and predator-control programs affect local populations of moose and caribou, but Paragi said he doesn’t think either would change much in abundance if people were to disappear.

“Moose density near urban Alaska would almost certainly go down as human disturbance of vegetation ended and predators increased, but one lightning-caused fire could change the landscape in a few days more than even a large amount of logging,” he said.

Each biologist in this story also mentioned the lingering affects of a warmer climate and how that may endure after people checked out.

“If we generally have milder winters, species like wood bison, mule deer and fishers will likely continue to spread westward into Alaska, along with deer ticks and others along for the ride on the mammals,” Paragi said.

“A huge unknown is how long human-induced climate-change effects, including ocean acidification, will linger and continue to impact and change ecosystems once we’re gone,” said Wipfli, the salmon expert. “Undoubtedly at least hundreds, more like thousands, of years.”

“Problems like climate-change, pollution and introduction of exotic species all over the world means migrant birds are getting impacted by humans during all aspects of their life cycle,” Guers said.

This column is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community.

Posted by Nikki Withington On October - 27 - 2011 1 COMMENT

Nancy Tarnai
907-474-5042
10/25/2011

Since Charlie Knight (aka “Mr. Agriculture”) has retired he could just sit back in his recliner, wrapped in his John Deere fleece blanket and take it easy.

But that would be so un-Charlie. “I’ve got too many hobbies,” Knight said. “That’s the reason I retired.” His latest retirement was from the post of northern region manager for the state Division of Agriculture.

Along with fishing and hunting, Knight, 64, is a gardener and beekeeper. His passion is cultivating wild berries, particularly lingonberries and blueberries. “There has been very little research on Alaska berries,” Knight said. “My goal is to domesticate them and find the best wild berries in Alaska and move them to my land gradually where they can be mechanically harvested.”

Charlie Knight

Photo by Nancy Tarnai
Knight enjoys retirement, but stays busy.

It’s a fairly daunting proposal. “There are 30 things to be done and I’ll never live long enough to do them,” Knight mused. He visits sites all around the Interior to determine where the best berries are. He judges how high off the ground the berries are and how many berries are in each cluster. “There are 31 different characteristics to look for in blueberries,” he said.

At Knight’s three acre farm near Eielson Air Force Base he has already accumulated 56 different varieties of berries and fruits, including gooseberries, red and black currants, sea berries, Saskatoon berries, cherries, high bush cranberries, chokecherries and rhubarb. In spite of all the work he has done to get to this point the moose seem to think the farm is for their dining enjoyment.

Raised on a 280-acre farm in Kansas and in the little town of Beeler, Knight was immersed in agriculture. He headed off to Kansas State University with a goal of learning how to be a farm manager. “Everyone was saying back then that by the year 2000 the world would be overpopulated and there would not be enough food,” Knight said. “I thought that the person who knew how to grow food would always get to eat.”

Knight earned a bachelor’s degree in agronomy and then a master’s, researching nitrate pollution of ground water from fertilizers. The day he finished his degree his advisor told him a former professor of Knight’s that he’d traveled all over Kansas with gathering corn samples was in Alaska and needed a technician.

Knight arrived at the University of Alaska Fairbanks in 1971 after marrying his college sweetheart, Becky. A couple of years later Knight was enticed back to Kansas because university salaries had not kept pace with inflation caused by the pipeline construction, but when the Delta Agricultural Project needed an agronomist, Knight said he “loaded up the trailer and came back.”

With 60,000 acres of farmland to develop, the project was a huge endeavor for the state and university. “It was an interesting time,” Knight said. “The pipeline was flowing full. There were all kinds of grant money.”

With some of those funds Knight helped start a university experiment farm in Delta Junction and managed research plots in Delta, Palmer and Fairbanks. He also began working on a doctorate studying the fate of urea fertilizer in sub-Arctic agricultural soils.

After earning his Ph.D., Knight began teaching and continued researching fertilizer rates, minimum tillage and evaluations of alternative crops for Alaska.

In 2001 he retired from UAF and joined the Division of Agriculture, helping farmers plan how to export products such as potatoes, peonies and willows, and working with the pest program.

Over the years, Knight noticed a trend toward smaller farms that grow high dollar niche crops. “We’re moving away from the large scale,” he said.

One of the most difficult challenges is simply defining agriculture, Knight said. “The borough, the state, the U.S.D.A. all have different definitions. Most say it’s the production of food and fiber.”

“But Alaska has a lot of screwy laws.”

Fairbanks will remain home for the Knights, who plan to travel a bit in the winter to visit their children Doug and Amy. “In the summertime I will play with my berries and swat the moose away from them,” Knight said.


This column is provided as a service by the UAF School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences and the Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station.

Posted by Nikki Withington On October - 26 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Spider in the window

UAF photo by Theresa Bakker
A giant spider hangs in the window as the University of Alaska Museum of the North prepares for its Halloween open house.

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
10/25/11

The University of Alaska Fairbanks will host several Halloween events this weekend. All of the events are open to the public. Parking at UAF is free on the weekends and after 5 p.m. on weekdays.

Halloween at the University of Alaska Museum of the North
Monday, Oct. 31, 4-7 p.m. – UA Museum of the North

Costumed superheroes, zombies and scary monsters of all kinds are invited to see bones and bugs, bats and birds in the museum’s research labs and explore the galleries. The event is for children ages 12 and under with adult chaperones. Admission is free with a donation of canned food for the Fairbanks Community Food Bank.
  Information: 474-7505

Wood Center’s Family Halloween Bash
Saturday, Oct. 29, 4-6 p.m, – Wood Center
Wood Center will host a full slate of activities for children 12 and under with adult supervision, including Mars vs. Aliens Bowling, Space Walk, Fishing in Space, Rocket Launch and more. Goodie bags and prizes will be given out. Admission is free with a canned food donation to the Fairbanks Community Food Bank. 
Information: 474-7037

Chilling Children’s Carnival and Trick-or-Treating
Saturday, Oct. 29, 5-8 p.m. – Moore-Bartlett-Skarland Complex
UAF Residence Life will host trick-or-treating and a Halloween carnival. The carnival will take place from 5-8 p.m. in the Hess Rec Center and will include a variety of activities and games. Trick-or-treating in Moore and Bartlett Halls will run from 6-7:30 p.m. Trick-or-treaters should meet in the lobby and will be escorted through the buildings by volunteers. Admission is free.
Information: 474-7247

NW/10-25-11/095-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On October - 26 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Shelbie Umphenour
907-474-2417
10/25/11

The Socratic Society at the University of Alaska Fairbanks will sponsor a debate Thursday, Oct. 27 at 1 p.m. between UAF philosophy and biology professor Eduardo Wilner and philosophy professor Doug Geivett [GUY-vit], from the Talbot School of Theology at Biola University.

The debate, which will be held in the Carol Brown Ballroom in the UAF Wood Center, will concentrate on the arguments behind both theism and atheism. Geivett will argue in favor of theism while Wilner will argue in favor of atheism.

The event is free and open to the public.

SCU/10-25-11/094psa-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On October - 26 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

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