Kijik, Alaska

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kijik,_Alaska an entity of type: Thing

基吉克(英語:Kijik)是位於美國阿拉斯加州湖泊-半島自治市鎮的一個鬼鎮。由於此地已於1904年被荒廢,本地已無人居住。 rdf:langString
Kijik (Dena'ina: Qizhjeh) is a ghost town in Lake and Peninsula Borough, Alaska, United States. An Athabascan village that was established on the shores of Lake Clark in the Alaska Range, its population was recorded at 91 in the 1880 United States Census and declined thereafter, falling to approximately 25 individuals by 1904. Today, the village has been abandoned. The ghost town is located within the bounds of Lake Clark National Park and Preserve. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Kijik, Alaska
rdf:langString 基吉克 (阿拉斯加州)
rdf:langString Kijik Archeological District
rdf:langString Kijik Archeological District
xsd:integer 24582712
xsd:integer 1117862240
xsd:date 1994-10-12
rdf:langString Scenery in the district
xsd:gMonthDay --10-12
rdf:langString , Lake Clark National Park and Preserve
rdf:langString Alaska
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString nhld
xsd:integer 94001644
rdf:langString Kijik (Dena'ina: Qizhjeh) is a ghost town in Lake and Peninsula Borough, Alaska, United States. An Athabascan village that was established on the shores of Lake Clark in the Alaska Range, its population was recorded at 91 in the 1880 United States Census and declined thereafter, falling to approximately 25 individuals by 1904. Today, the village has been abandoned. The ghost town is located within the bounds of Lake Clark National Park and Preserve. The historic portion of the village was the subject of archaeological and ethnological research in the 1960s. Interviews with Dena'ina elders in Nondalton established that the people of Kijik relocated to Old Nondalton (not far from present-day Nondalton) in the early 20th century, probably to be closer to trading posts and the canneries of Bristol Bay. A survey expedition that visited the site in 1909 reported it to be abandoned. A major archaeological excavation of the historic village took place in 1966, exposing twelve foundational remnants of log houses (many of the houses having apparently been moved to Old Nondalton at the time of the relocation), and two of what appeared to be larger communal structures. In 1979, twelve acres of the village site were added to the National Register of Historic Places as a historic district. A much larger area, encompassing a significant number of archaeological sites related to the habitation and use of the area from at least the 12th century forward, was designated a National Historic Landmark District in 1994, for the unique concentration of sites related to the inland Dena'ina people. The community was known by many other names than "Kijik" during its history, including "Lake Clark Village", "Nijik", "Nikhkak", "Nikhak", and "Old Keegik". Its current name has been spelled in a wide variety of ways, including "Keechik", "Keeghik", "Keejik", "Keggik", "Keygik", "Kichak", "Kichik", "Kilchik", and "Kilchikh".
rdf:langString 基吉克(英語:Kijik)是位於美國阿拉斯加州湖泊-半島自治市鎮的一個鬼鎮。由於此地已於1904年被荒廢,本地已無人居住。
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6454
xsd:double 7769964.331008
xsd:string 94001644

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