2010: Adaptation strategies

Shaktoolik residents talk about how they have learned to adapt to large storms and other climate impacts and how traditional subsistence cultural practices are essential in order to be more resilient.

Shaktoolik, Alaska

64.33388889999999, -161.15388889999997

Shaktoolik is a native village located on the eastern shore of the Norton Sound in the Bering Sea.  Shaktoolik was the first and southernmost Malemiut settlement on Norton Sound, occupied as early as 1839. 

Twelve miles northeast of Shaktoolik was Iyatayet, which may have been the original settlement in this area around 6,000 to 8,000 years ago.  Over that time span, several other indigenous groups settled in the area as well. 

Villagers in Shaktoolik fish and follow a subsistence lifestyle, which is significantly dependent on climate conditions. Shaktoolik typically has a subarctic maritime climate but this is changing quickly with climate change. 

The most visible impact of climate change in Shaktoolik is the increased intensity of fall storms that imminently threaten the village.  Video interviews of villagers explaining the threat from storms and other climatic changes can be seen on the Impacts page.