The mining newspaper for Alaska and Canada's North

Articles from the 'Ancsa Mining' series


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  • Arctic Slope Regional Corp. North Slope oil gas Trans Alaska Pipeline rig

    More than oil across Arctic Slope region

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 26, 2020

    It was the vast petroleum reserves lying under what is now the Arctic Slope Regional Corp. (ASRC) region and the need to build a roughly 800-mile pipeline to deliver oil to global markets that prompted the need to settle aboriginal land claims in Alaska and led to the passage of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, commonly referred to as ANCSA. Signed into law by U.S. President Richard Nixon in 1971 ANCSA involved a unique plan to organize Alaska Natives into 12 regional... Full story

  • CIRI real estate extends beyond Tikahtnu

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 26, 2020

    With more than half of Alaska's entire population living within its region, Cook Inlet Region Inc., more commonly known as CIRI, is the most metropolitan of the 12 landholding Alaska Native regional corporations. While CIRI has leveraged its urban position with retail developments such as Tikahtnu Commons, an enormous retail and entertainment center on the outskirts of Anchorage, the Southcentral Alaska regional corporation also has oil and gas, renewable energy and mining... Full story

  • Purpose, tradition guide Chugach Alaska

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 26, 2020

    Stretching along roughly 400 miles of Alaska's southern coast – from the north end of the Southeast Alaska Panhandle near Icy Bay to the tip of the Kenai Peninsula near Homer – the Chugach Alaska Corp. region epitomizes Alaska beauty. This 10 million-acre region along Gulf of Alaska coastline is carved with majestic fjords and bays teeming with fish, birds and marine mammals, and vistas of mountains and glaciers rising above and cutting through dense forests of hemlock and... Full story

  • Calista companies – rural Alaska experts

    Updated Sep 26, 2020

    Calista Corp., the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) regional corporation for the Yukon-Kuskokwim region of Southwest Alaska endeavors to set "the standard for economic success and corporate responsibility." This corporate vision is passed down to Calista's subsidiaries, a group of 30 companies that provide a broad range of services that include heavy equipment sales, rental and service; construction, including pilings and crane services; transportation and... Full story

  • Calista sees golden future for SW Alaska

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 26, 2020

    Calista Corp. and its 31,400 Yup'ik, Cup'ik and Athabascan shareholders are on the cusp of realizing the benefits that will come with the sustainable development of a mine at the 45-million-ounce Donlin Gold project on their land in the Yukon-Kuskokwim region of Southwest Alaska. With 39 million oz of gold in measured and indicated resources that average 2.24 grams per metric ton, and another 6 million oz in the inferred category averaging 2.02 g/t gold, Donlin Gold is truly a... Full story

  • Bering Straits – On the edge of tomorrow

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 26, 2020

    Home of the famed golden beaches of Nome that have captured the imagination of millions over the past 120 years, the Bering Straits Native Corporation (BSNC) region covers the Seward Peninsula and coastal lands arcing around the eastern and southern coast of the Norton Sound in the far western reaches of Alaska. While this region may be 300 miles beyond North America's highway system, it has served as a crossroads for human activity for at least 15 millennia and will continue... Full story

  • Kodiak Island Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act ANCSA mining

    Koniag continues a tradition of mining

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 26, 2020

    The Koniag Inc. region covers the Kodiak Archipelago, a group of islands off the southern coast of mainland Alaska better known for their enormous brown bears than vast mineral potential. The Alutiiq people that arrived on Kodiak, Afognak and surrounding islands more than 7,500 years ago were skilled mariners who were deeply connected to the ocean for food and supplies. Over the millennia, these roaming seafarers settled into whaling and fishing villages that sheltered... Full story

  • Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act Aleut Aleutian Islands Ring of Fire

    Aleut's Ring of Fire mineral potential

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 26, 2020

    Aleut Corporation is committed to promoting economic opportunities for its more than 4,000 shareholders, while preserving the traditional culture and values developed from living in a ruggedly beautiful stretch of Alaska. The Alaska Peninsula and 167 named Aleutian Islands extending more than 1,000 miles off Southwest Alaska that make up the Aleut Corp. region form a border between the Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea. This geologically young island arc is part of the Pacific... Full story

  • Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act ANCSA mining articles

    "Fish First" guides BBNC resource policy

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 25, 2020

    The Bristol Bay region is home to two resources that beyond a doubt earn the moniker "world-class" – an annual run of sockeye salmon that is second to none and Pebble, the largest undeveloped copper and gold deposits known to exist on Earth. These world-renowned resources, however, have stirred up controversy in this Oklahoma-sized region of Southwest Alaska, as many of the roughly 7,400 Bristol Bay residents are concerned that mining the copper, gold, molybdenum and other m... Full story

  • Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act ANCSA mining mineral exploration business

    Ahtna offers great mineral opportunities

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 25, 2020

    When it comes to managing its more than 1.5 million acres of land in a region of Southcentral Alaska renowned for its natural beauty, Copper River salmon, abundant wildlife and one of the richest lodes of copper to ever by mined on earth, Ahtna Inc. balances development for the prosperity of its current shareholders and preservation of resources for future generations. An important facet of this management is ensuring that there are plenty of plants, fish and wildlife to suppo... Full story

  • Doyon's vast Tintina Gold Belt potential

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 25, 2020

    With 12.5 million acres of land spanning Alaska's Interior, Doyon Ltd. is the largest private landholder in the state and one of the largest in the nation. For mining and mineral exploration companies, the rich mineral potential of these lands may be more impressive than the sheer size of the estate. This is because the Doyon region is a nearly Texas-sized swath of Interior Alaska that is renowned for its gold and a host of other metals, providing the regional corporation,... Full story

  • Doyon – Leader in all we do

    Updated Sep 25, 2020

    "Leader in all we do" is the corporate vision of Doyon, the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) regional corporation for Alaska's Interior. This high standard is motivated by a desire to see its shareholders flourish; traditional ways thrive; and ensure a rich inheritance for future generations of shareholders. This vision for excellence extends to Doyon's family of companies. These subsidiaries provide a wide range of services, including catering, facility... Full story

  • Mines and mineral exploration projects in the Sealaska region Southeast Alaska

    Sealaska – balanced resource development

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 25, 2020

    Seeking economic and cultural prosperity for its more than 22,000 Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian shareholders while also looking to provide even greater benefits for future generations, Sealaska takes a balanced approach to developing the resources growing above and stored beneath its lands in Southeast Alaska. This does not mean the Southeast Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) corporation shuns mining or other resource development in its region, a nearly 600-mile... Full story

  • Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act ANCSA mining on First Nations land

    NANA – "Two worlds, one spirit"

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 25, 2020

    The Red Dog Mine has been a gamechanger for the more than 14,000 Iñupiat shareholders of NANA Corp., the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) regional corporation that owns the world-class Red Dog deposits in Northwest Alaska that are the source of around 5 percent of the world's new zinc supply each year. The revenues from shipping out more than 1 billion pounds of zinc annually, along with healthy portions of lead, silver and minor amounts of germanium, has served... Full story

  • NANA companies serving Alaska mining

    Updated Sep 25, 2020

    NANA's growing portfolio of businesses provide services to the mining, petroleum, commercial, and federal business sectors in 15 countries on six continents. NANA companies have been structured to evolve quickly-to embrace new technologies and game-changing capabilities-with the aim of exceeding the needs and expectations of NANA's customers. Here is a list of NANA companies that provide a variety of services to Alaska's mining sector: Tuuq Drilling, LLC provides drilling... Full story

  • Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act ANCSA primer for mining sector

    An Alaska Native claims primer for miners

    Shane Lasley, Mining News|Updated Sep 25, 2020

    Alaska boasts what many consider the most successful Aboriginal land claims settlement on Earth – a solution that has not only turned out to be a cultural success, but a brilliant business move for the more than 140,000 Alaska Natives and an economic boon for the state that covers the resource-rich lands these industrious and innovative peoples have called home for millennia. Signed into law by U.S. President Richard Nixon in 1971, the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, comm... Full story

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