Showing 30 results for Huna ...
Glacier Bay Visitor Information Station
Whiteman Connecting Trail Trailhead
Sea Otter Canoe, Yáxwch'i Yaakw
Bartlett Cove
- Type: Article

The Bartlett Cove ethnographic landscape represents a Traditional Cultural Place (TCP) eligible for nomination to the National Register. As a traditional homeland, it is important to the past and present Huna Tlingit. Other features represent industry, homesteading, and NPS development. The multiple layers of the landscape have been documented in several Cultural Landscape Inventories, which can inform National Register Determinations of Eligibility.
- Type: Article
Learn more about Huna Tlingit connections to mountain goat and how to crochet your very own!
Riggs Spring Loop Trailhead at Yovimpa
Raven (Yéil Kootéeyaa) and Eagle (Ch’áak’ Kootéeyaa) Totem Poles
The Healing Totem Pole, Yaa Naa Néx Kootéeyaa
Kaasteen
- Type: Article
Island Park Trail
- Type: Place

This hike takes you through a diversity of scenery, including the multi-hued panorama of Island Park, grasslands, desert shrub community, and sandstone canyons. The Island Park Trail connects the Jones Hole Trail with the Island Park area. It follows the historic route that rangers used to access the Jones Hole area prior to the construction of Jones Hole National Fish Hatchery and its access road.
Arizona: Painted Desert Inn
- Type: Place

Only one national park in the country includes and protects a section of historic Route 66: the Petrified Forest National Park with one of the world’s largest and most colorful concentrations of petrified wood, multi-hued badlands of the Painted Desert, historic structures, archeological sites, and displays of over 200-million-year-old fossils.
At.óowu: Tlingit Homeland
- Type: Article

Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve contains almost 2.7 million acres of designated wilderness and is one of few national parks that protect wilderness marine waters. The area is also the traditional homeland of two Tlingit tribes; the Gunaaxoo Kwaan who claim the northern coastal reaches and the Huna Kawoo who settled Glacier Bay proper, Icy Strait, and long stretches of the outer coast.
Haa Atx̲aayi Haa K̲usteeyix̲ Sitee, Our Food is Our Way of Life
Weaving Strength in Women
Glacier Bay Wilderness as Homeland
- Type: Article

Glacier Bay is the ancestral homeland of the Huna Tlingit. Tlingit clans learned to live in a delicate balance with this vast, rugged wilderness, and their history tells stories of human strife when this balance between man and wilderness was disrespected. Today, designated wilderness in Glacier Bay preserves this homeland from modern human development.