Scientist Spotlight: Arctic Marine Science
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What does it mean to sustain both a fishery and a way of life?
Join Harmony Wayner, Network Coordinator for the Western Alaska Landscape Initiative and a commercial and subsistence harvester in Bristol Bay, for a conversation about the connections between people, fish, culture, and place. Drawing on Indigenous values and lived experience, Wayner will explore food sovereignty, community well-being, and how marine science can better reflect the priorities of Alaska communities.
Following the presentation, spend time in Arctic Marine Science: Sikuliaq to Shore and create your own painted wooden salmon inspired by the stories, relationships, and ecosystems that sustain life along Alaska’s coasts.
Free. Registration not required.
$15 per person; $13.50 for museum members. Includes museum admission.
5:30-7:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20, Discovery Center, Art Lab
Join Harmony Wayner, Network Coordinator for the Western Alaska Landscape Initiative and a commercial and subsistence harvester in Bristol Bay, for a conversation about the connections between people, fish, culture, and place. Drawing on Indigenous values and lived experience, Wayner will explore food sovereignty, community well-being, and how marine science can better reflect the priorities of Alaska communities.
Following the presentation, spend time in Arctic Marine Science: Sikuliaq to Shore and create your own painted wooden salmon inspired by the stories, relationships, and ecosystems that sustain life along Alaska’s coasts.
Free. Registration not required.
$15 per person; $13.50 for museum members. Includes museum admission.
5:30-7:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20, Discovery Center, Art Lab
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Where is it happening?
625 C Street, Anchorage, AK, United States, Alaska 99501
Event Location & Nearby Stays:
Know what’s Happening Next — before everyone else does.
Host or PublisherAnchorage Museum







