Alaska
Alaskan collector cosigns prehistoric bear skull to auction house
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – A caramel-colored skull of an ancient cave bear, believed to be at least 60,000 years old and is up for auction in Anchorage.
The Alaska Auction Company received the skull from a local collector. Alaska Auction manager Megan Mosesian said they’ve worked with this particular consigner frequently through the years and have seen several fossil pieces pass hands. The cave bear skull currently available is actually the second that’s come through the auction house, and according to Mosesian, it’s much bigger and in much better condition.
Cave bears, a prehistoric bear species whose remains are typically found in caves, are believed to have been herbivorous, according to Mosesian. “Even though they have these huge fangs,” Mosesian said while describing the high-quality preservation of the skull in question.
“This one in particular has a unique color and it has a very unique size,” Mosesian said. “Most cave bear skulls, the average of the length between the gum line and the crust is about 15 to 20 inches. This one is 23 inches, so it’s a very big guy.”
Mosesian said the skull’s atypical light brown coloration is likely due to the minerals it was resting in, which prevented fossilization.
“It sort of caramelized, is what I was told,” Mosesian said.
With a full set of molars and intact top and bottom, Mosesian calls the piece “museum quality.”
The skull is up for auction until March 20, and Mosesian said it’s been wildly popular online.
“When authentic pieces come through and they can be well tracked, they’re definitely highly sought after,“ Mosesian said, ”when we post something on the auction, we can see how many people like, watch it, or flag it… I’d say this one’s probably gotten 3000% more engagement than other lots or similar fossil lots.”
Mosesian estimated the approximate retail value of the skull near $30,000, and said they’ve already conducted dozens of private viewings with potential buyers.
“We’re just so thrilled to get it through auction. I kind of hope it stays in Alaska, but of course it’s up for anyone in the world,” Mosesian said. “We ship all over the world, but the majority of our customers are, of course, Alaskan-based.”
Mosesian said while she is not a collector of fossils, pieces of ancient history make the study of the past more interesting to her.
“I think that finding physical pieces that you can interact with that show these things that once were,” Mosesian said. “To me at least, I understand the appeal as someone who would want to a preserve something that is long extinct, and then also to kind of be transported back to a time that is very different from what we exist in now.”
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Alaska
SEACAD seizes over 2,200 grams of meth in Southeast Alaska
JUNEAU, Alaska (KTUU) – Two men were arrested in separate drug investigations led by the Southeast Alaska Cities Against Drugs (SEACAD) task force in Southeast Alaska after authorities intercepted packages containing methamphetamine, according to the Juneau Police Department.
In one case, investigators in Ketchikan identified a suspicious package on Oct. 28, that was determined to contain around 2,056 grams – roughly 4.5 pounds – of methamphetamine. The package was delivered on Nov. 1 and picked up by 33-year-old Louisiana resident Adidas Nike Zion Brown, who took it to his residence on the 1000 block of Dunton Street, according to the Juneau Police Department.
After Brown opened the package, officers seized the drugs, which have an estimated street value of $315,960. Officers also seized a firearm at the scene. Brown was arrested and taken to the Ketchikan Correctional Center.
Brown is facing three counts of misconduct involving a controlled substance in the third degree, two counts of misconduct involving a controlled substance in the fourth degree and two counts of misconduct involving a weapon in the third degree.
In a separate investigation, SEACAD identified two suspicious packages shipped to Haines between Oct. 27 and Nov. 4. The packages were found to contain about 235 – about half a pound – of methamphetamine combined.
On Nov. 5, the packages were delivered in Haines and picked up by 30-year-old resident Austin Elmer Benedict Hotch, who took it to a residence on the 200 block of 2nd Avenue, according to the Juneau Police Department. Investigators later seized the drugs, valued at about $50,000. Officers also seized roughly $24,000 in cash.
Hotch was arrested and taken to the Haines Borough Community Jail on a charge of misconduct involving a controlled substance in the third degree.
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Alaska
Egan Center closes as shelter for Halong victims
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – The Egan Civic and Convention Center in downtown Anchorage closed Tuesday night as a shelter for hundreds of Alaskans displaced by ex-Typhoon Halong last month.
The announcement came as over 300 people who were evacuated from Western Alaska communities were being moved from both the Egan Center and Alaska Airlines Center on the University of Alaska Anchorage campus into private, non-congregate shelters.
Shelter operations from the Egan moved to the Spenard Community Recreation Center at 2020 West 48th Avenue. That location will be open daily from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., according to the Alaska Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management.
The strong storm made landfall over Oct. 11-12 on Alaska’s western coast, leaving a path of destruction in dozens of villages in the Kuskokwim delta area. One person was confirmed dead and two others were still missing.
The Spenard rec center shelter will be temporary, according to Bryan Fisher, director of the homeland security division.
“Closing the Egan Center doesn’t signal the end of our shelter support mission or diminish the urgent need to transition more people into non-congregate housing,” Fisher said in a prepared release.
While shelter operations ended at the Egan Center, the building will still be used as a United States Postal Service center for incoming mail for those displaced by Halong. That service will stop at the end of November, authorities said.
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Alaska
Anchorage assistance center opens for Western Alaska storm evacuees
A new center opened Monday to provide disaster recovery services to Western Alaska residents displaced by ex-Typhoon Halong who evacuated to the Anchorage area, state officials said.
Available services at the hub include help with state and federal disaster recovery aid applications, business and homeowner loan application support, social services, and tribal identification replacement, the State Emergency Operations Center said in a statement Monday. State officials said the effort is in cooperation with Calista Corp.
The Disaster Assistance Center, located in the Calista building at 1400 W. Benson Blvd, Suite 110, will be open weekdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Nov. 14, according to emergency officials. Evacuees needing a ride to the center can contact Alaska 211 by dialing 211 or 1-800-478-2221, emailing alaska211@ak.org or visiting alaska211.org.
Similar services have been offered in Bethel, where some displaced by last month’s disastrous Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta storm have also sought shelter.
State emergency officials in an update Sunday said that there have been 1,280 applications for state individual assistance and 491 applications for Federal Emergency Management Agency aid. The federal aid became available after President Donald Trump’s Oct. 22 federal disaster declaration.
The deadline for those seeking state aid is Dec. 9. It is Dec. 22 for anyone applying for federal assistance.
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