Category
page 1Siberian Yupik
St. Lawrence Island
island in Nome Census Area, Alaska, United States
Savoonga
city in Nome Census Area, Alaska, United States
Gambell
city in Alaska, United States
Central Siberian Yupik
language
Sirenik
language
Naukan Yupik
language
Siberian Yupik people
Yupik Eskimo people who live near the Bering Strait

yaranga
thumb
thumb|Yupik natives of East Cape Village, Siberia, Russia photographed in 1885 in front of two houses. The houses appear similar to Chukchi yarangas. A rack with, probably drying fur skins (foxes), is at left. On the right side of the left tent a stretched seal skin. The tents also covered with hides.
A Yaranga (Chukchi: Яраӈы, Yarangy) is a tent-like traditional mobile home of some nomadic Northern indigenous peoples of Russia, such as Chukchi and Siberian Yupik.
Naukan people
ethnic group in Northeastern Siberia
Kudlik
thumb|A being lit, Nunavut, 1999
Sirenik Eskimos
Sirenik or Sireniki ( ) are an Eskaleut-speaking ethnic group of Chukotka Autonomous Okrug and former speakers of a divergent Eskimo-Aleut language in Siberia, before its extinction in 1997. The total language death of this language means that now the cultural identity of Sirenik Yupik is maintained through other aspects: slight dialectal difference in the adopted Siberian Yupik language; sense of place, including appreciation of the antiquity of their settlement Sirenik.