Cape Krusenstern National Monument

A group of muskox grazing in a meadow.

Cape Krusenstern National Monument was established on December 2, 1980 under the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA), to protect and interpret a series of archaeological sites depicting every known culture period in Arctic Alaska; to provide for scientific study of the process of human population of the area from the Asian continent; in cooperation with Native Alaskans, to preserve and interpret evidence of prehistoric and historic Native cultures; to protect habitat for marine mammals; to protect habitat for and populations of birds and other wildlife, and fish resources; and to protect the viability of subsistence resources.

North of Kotzebue and above the Arctic Circle, the Monument is comprised of 659,807 acres of land and water and forms 70 miles of shoreline on the Chukchi Sea.

News from Cape Krusenstern National Monument

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    Last updated: June 1, 2022