Alaska

Rafters find body of North Slope whale researcher caught in Chulitna River logjam

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By Anchorage Daily News

Updated: 9 minutes ago Published: 9 minutes ago

The body of a renowned Utqiaġvik whale researcher was found Sunday afternoon in the Chulitna River, more than a week after he went missing while rafting, Alaska State Troopers said.

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John Craighead “Craig” George, 70, was knocked from his raft by a logjam on July 5 near Cantwell, according to troopers.

He and five others had departed that day for a five-day trip with two rafts and one packraft, one of George’s friends said last week.

[While the search for Utqiaġvik whale researcher continues, his friends and family reflect on his role in the community]

High water levels made it dangerous for search and rescue crews to immediately access the area where George disappeared, a spokesman for the troopers said. A dive team eventually cleared the logjam, and troopers searched by air while conditions were unsafe.

A group of rafters found George’s body around 3 p.m. Sunday roughly 7 1/2 air miles downriver from where he was last seen, troopers said. A wildlife trooper and helicopter crew responded to recover his remains and transport them to Fairbanks, troopers said.

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George was an internationally acclaimed wildlife researcher who studied bowhead whales. He worked as a senior wildlife biologist for more than 30 years at the North Slope Borough Department of Wildlife Management.

[Alaska science: Craig George’s remarkable northern legacy]





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