Kobuk Valley Grants
Caribou, sand dunes, the Kobuk River, Onion Portage - just some of the facets of Kobuk Valley National Park. Half a million caribou migrate through, their tracks crisscrossing sculpted dunes. The Kobuk River is an ancient and current path for people and wildlife.
For 9000 years, people came to Onion Portage to harvest caribou as they swam the river. Even today, that rich tradition continues.
The objective of this Cooperative Agreement is to update baseline data on the customary and traditional uses of fish and wildlife by residents of Kiana, AK. Kiana, located 57 air miles east of...morePosted On - 2020-05-27
This agreement is to fund an overall project with two National Park Unit components. One component is to survey the upper portion of the Rabbit Creek drainage and the northern portion of Cape...morePosted On - 2020-04-07
Archeological field research on federal lands in Alaska were conducted under federal permits by representatives of Brown University as far back as the 1940s. These nationally significant collections...morePosted On - 2019-08-22
This announcement is to provide public notice of the National Park Service (NPS), intention to fund the following project with University of Alaska Fairbanks under a Cooperative Ecosystem Studies...morePosted On - 2012-06-28
Social Entrepreneurship
Spotlight
Melbourne social enterprise Who Gives A Crap sold nearly 3 million rolls of toilet paper in 2014/15 and gave half the proceeds to WaterAid Australia, but co-founder Simon Griffiths says the donation would have been less had the startup adopted a non-profit model when it launched two years ago.