Category
page 1Yupik culture
Alaskan ice cream
Athabaskan dessert

yaranga
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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.

mukluk
thumb|upright=1.7|Two pair of sealskin kamiit. Left, winter kamik, right, summer kamik.
Mukluks or kamik ( ) (singular: , plural: ) are soft boots, traditionally made of reindeer (caribou) skin or sealskin, and worn by Indigenous Arctic peoples, including Inuit, Iñupiat, and Yup'ik.
angakkuq
thumb|Ikpukhuak and his angatkuq wife, Higalik (Ice House), between 1913 and 1916
thumb|The angakkuq, Niaqunguaq, between 1921 and 1924
Kudlik
thumb|A being lit, Nunavut, 1999
Kuspuk
thumb|upright|Alaska Native dancer performing in a kuspuk
thumb|upright|Man wearing a contemporary kuspuk
thumb|Senator Lisa Murkowski wearing a kuspuk
A kuspuk () (; ) is a hooded overshirt with a large front pocket commonly worn among Alaska Natives. Kuspuks are tunic-length, falling anywhere from below the hips to below the knees. The bottom portion of kuspuks worn by women may be gathered and akin to a skirt. Kuspuks tend to be pullover garments, though some have zippers.