Kodiak Island
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Kodiak Island is a large island on the south coast of the U.S. state of Alaska, separated from the Alaska mainland by the Shelikof Strait.
It is the largest island in Alaska and the second largest island in the United States, after the Big Island of Hawaii, with 8,975 square kilometres (3,465 mile²) of area. It is 160 km (100 miles) long and varies from 16 to 96 km (10 to 60 miles) wide. Kodiak Island is the largest island in the Kodiak Archipelago.
Kodiak Island is mountainous and heavily forested in the north and east and fairly treeless on the south. The island has many ice-free, deep bays that provide sheltered anchorages for boats.
Most of the island is a national wildlife refuge. The Kodiak Bear and the Kodiak king crab are native to the island.
Kodiak Island is part of the Kodiak Island Borough of Alaska. The largest town on the island is Kodiak. Villages include Ahkiok, Old Harbor, Karluk, Larsen Bay, Port Lions, and Ouzinki.
Fishing is a major occupation; fisheries include salmon, halibut, and crab. The Karluk River is famous for its salmon run. Logging, ranching, numerous canneries, and some copper mining are also prevalent. Kodiak is also home to a large U.S. Coast Guard station, Integrated Support Command Kodiak.
[edit] History
Kodiak is the ancestral land of the Koniaga, an Alutiiq nation. The original inhabitants subsisted by hunting, fishing, farming and gathering. The first Westerners to settle on the island were Russians explorers under Grigory Shelikhov, who founded a Russian settlement on Kodiak Island at Three Saints Bay, near the present-day village of Old Harbor, in 1784. Following the Alaskan Purchase of 1867, Americans moved in and engaged in hunting and fox farming.
The Koniagas had been studied by European explorers, who marveled at their practice of male concubinage: "A Kodiak mother will select her handsomest and most promising boy, and dress and rear him as a girl, teaching him only domestic duties, keeping him at women's work, associating him with women and girls, in order to render his effeminacy complete. Arriving at the age of ten or fifteen years, he is married to some wealthy man who regards such a companion as a great acquisition. These male concubines are called Achnutschik or Schopans'" (Richard Francis Burton in his Terminal Essay, after Holmberg, Langsdorff, Joseph Billings, Choris, Yuri Lisiansky and Marchand)
Kodiak Island was explored in 1763 by Russian fur trader Stepan Glotov. The island was the location of the first permanent Russian settlement in Alaska, founded by Grigory Shelikhov, a fur trader, on Three Saints Bay in 1784. The settlement was moved to the site of present-day Kodiak in 1792 and became the center of Russian fur trading. In 1912 the eruption of Novarupta on the mainland (erroneously attributed at one time to the more famous Mount Katmai) blanketed the island with volcanic ash, causing widespread destruction and loss of life. The island was also hit by the 1964 Good Friday Earthquake and tsunami, which destroyed much of the town.
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