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Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students.
Also known as: ANWR

News

Alaska governor asks Trump to roll back restrictions on oil and gas drilling Dec. 20, 2024, 3:50 AM ET (ABC News (U.S.))

Humans have lived in the region for thousands of years. The Athabaskan-speaking Gwich’in peoples are based in the Porcupine basin, and their economy is largely focused on the caribou herd that winters there. They maintain the small community of Arctic Village at the southern boundary of the wildlife refuge. Inupiat Eskimo (Inuit) inhabit the northern coastal area, subsisting primarily by hunting a variety of game. Their community of Kaktovik is located on a barrier island just off the coast of the refuge.

There are no roads in the wildlife refuge, and visitor access into it is largely by light aircraft that can land on lakes or small airstrips. Limited access (typically, day hikes) also is possible from the Dalton Highway (running parallel to the Trans-Alaska Pipeline) where it comes close to Atigun Gorge at the refuge’s westernmost point. Recreational activities include river rafting, wilderness hiking and camping, and wildlife viewing (notably polar bears). Hunting and fishing are permitted within the refuge.

In 1968 oil was discovered along the North Slope coast at Prudhoe Bay, about 75 miles (120 km) west of the wildlife refuge, and speculation grew about possible reserves on refuge lands. With the enactment of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act in 1971, both the Inupiat and Gwich’in were given ownership of federal lands in their traditional areas; in the case of the Inupiat, this involved roughly 145 square miles (375 square km) of coastal lands within the wildlife refuge. Each group eventually was given the option of transferring the subsurface mineral rights for its land to a private company; the Gwich’in chose not to participate, but the Inupiat accepted the offer and established the Kaktovik Inupiat Corporation. The 1980 federal law that expanded and renamed the refuge designated much of it as federally protected wilderness, but about 2,345 square miles (6,075 square km) of the refuge’s coastal plain (including the Inupiat land) was exempted from that designation and was set aside for further study, both of biological resources and of potential hydrocarbon reserves. That region—now known as the 1002 Area (for the section name of the 1980 law)—subsequently was assessed, with estimates of petroleum deposits there put in the billions-of-barrels range. The future of the 1002 Area has since been hotly and repeatedly debated between proponents and opponents of further oil exploration and drilling. Any resource development of the area (including on Inupiat lands) requires Congressional authorization; several attempts at such legislation have been made, but none has been enacted.

Because Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is so vast, is so largely untouched by human activity, and contains such a wide variety of fragile ecosystems, it has long been under scrutiny for signs of potential climate change. Over time, several trends associated with global warming have been identified there, which have been representative of conditions observed throughout the Arctic region. Most noticeable have been changes in pack ice in the Beaufort Sea, which, over time, has become thinner and has extended over a progressively smaller area each year and has been forming later each autumn and melting earlier each spring. There also has been a rise in the temperature of the permafrost on the coastal plain and a significant decrease in the size of glaciers in the mountains. In addition, more polar bears have been overwintering in dens on the mainland rather than on sea ice, and there has been a rise in the number of polar bears thought to have drowned after having been stranded on ice floes surrounded by expanses of open water.

Kenneth Pletcher