Category
page 1Native Americans in Alaska

Tlingit
The Tlingit or Lingít ( ) are an Indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest Coast of North America. Tlingit people are Alaska Natives and First Nations in Canada. They speak the Tlingit language, a Na-Dene language.
Yupik peoples
group of indigenous peoples of Alaska and the Russian Far East
Haida people
indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest Coast
Tsimshian people
thumb|Tsimshian Nisga'a stone mask, made around 1870 - greenish hard stone ([[Gabbro), pigment; from the Alphonse Pinart collection, Musée du quai Branly in Paris. This stone mask has a twin, without apertures for eyes, residing in the Canadian Museum of History. Separated over one hundred years, the two masks were reunited 1975, when the Paris mask travelled to Canada to appear in the exhibition "Images Stone: B.C." It was then that the relationship between the two masks, expressions of the same face, was re-discovered.]]
Eyak people
The Eyak ( ) are an Alaska Native people historically located on the Copper River Delta and near the town of Cordova, Alaska. They are Indigenous peoples of the Northwest Coast. Today, Eyak people live in Cordova, Yakutat, across Alaska, and the U.S.

Central Alaskan Yup'ik people
thumb|A Nunivak Island Cupʼig man in 1929
The Yupʼik or Yupiaq (sg & pl) and Yupiit or Yupiat (pl), also Central Alaskan Yupʼik, Central Yupʼik, Alaskan Yupʼik (own name Yupʼik sg Yupiik dual Yupiit pl; Russian: Юпики центральной Аляски), are an Indigenous people of western and southwestern Alaska ranging from southern Norton Sound southwards along the coast of the Bering Sea on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (including living on Nelson and Nunivak Islands) and along the northern coast of Bristol Bay as far east as Nushagak Bay and the northern Alaska Peninsula at Naknek River and Egegik Bay. They