The recent history of a black rock

Ned Rozell
907-474-7468
Aug. 16, 2024

A young man poses in a military uniform, holding his cap in his left hand at his waist.
Photographer unknown, public domain photo.
William Dall poses at the beginning of his first Ӱ expedition in 1885.

In June of 1867 — a few months before Ӱ would become part of the United States with the transfer of $7.2 million to Russia — William Healey Dall picked up a shiny black rock from a riverbank.

Dall was near the mouth of the Nowitna River, which flows into the Yukon River between today’s villages of Tanana and Ruby. 

He tucked away the interesting stone, scribbled a note about it in his journal and continued on his expedition. His mission was to survey a possible route for a telegraph line along the Yukon River that might connect the U.S. with Europe via the Bering Strait.

One-hundred-fifty-seven years later, while recently visiting Washington, D.C., Jeff Rasic held that same piece of obsidian in his hand.

Rasic, an archaeologist and the science coordinator for all the 15 National Park Service units in Ӱ, was at a gathering of colleagues in West Virginia. He had added a day to his trip from his home in Fairbanks to visit the Smithsonian Institution in Washington.

There, he walked right to the institution’s geological collection to further explore one of his favorite projects: the sources of ancient obsidian tools found in Ӱ.

Obsidian is a black, often translucent rock. Volcanic eruptions sometimes ooze out magma that turns into this natural glass as it cools. 

Obsidian is hard and durable and can be worked to a razor-sharp edge. Archaeologists find it in sites all over Ӱ where people once tipped spears, scraped hides and made knives with it. Far-north hunters also once implanted obsidian into the seats of their boats to draw whales to themselves.

“It’s a fluke-of-nature rock,” Rasic said. “Because it’s such a rare thing, we can make a very precise match between the artifact and its source.”

A black, glass-like rock sits on a fiber-board surface above a stained and chipped museum label.
Photo by Jeff Rasic
A piece of obsidian rock sits on display in the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. William Healey Dall collected the rock in 1868 near the Nowitna River in Interior Ӱ.

A good deal of the human-used obsidian in Ӱ comes from a source called Batza Tena near the Indian River in Interior Ӱ. There are a few other notable obsidian deposits, such as near Wiki Peak in the Wrangell Mountains, Okmok Caldera in the Aleutian Islands and sources in Southeast Ӱ.

Rasic is always on the lookout for samples of Ӱ obsidian. He wants to pinpoint long-forgotten sources and learn what the rocks can tell us about interactions between ancient Ӱns.

For example, he once linked an obsidian artifact from a 3,000-year-old site on Unalaska Island in the Aleutians to a source in the Wrangell Mountains, just a dozen miles from the Canada border.

“To find something (in the Aleutians) from Interior Ӱ was a big surprise,” Rasic said.

How does Rasic tell the difference between Wiki Peak obsidian and obsidian from Okmok Volcano? He carries a handheld machine that looks like a barcode scanner.

In the basement of the Smithsonian in Washington, Rasic pointed his machine at the black rock Dall had reported as a possible geological source. He pulled the trigger. The device sent out controlled beam of X-rays that excited electrons within the rock. That allowed Rasic to instantly know the concentration of elements in that piece of obsidian.

A stone building rises above a flower bed and road. Several people are around the building entrance.
Photo by Jeff Rasic
Visitors enter the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., in July 2024.

Dall’s rock was a perfect match to Batza Tena, which makes sense in that the source is 70 miles from the beach where Dall picked it up.

Rasic was pleasantly surprised to find that ancient people had worked this piece of obsidian, a rock he thought might have been from one of those unknown outcrops for which he is always searching.

Dall’s obsidian was “evidently from a nearby camp, carried there by people with connections to the Koyukuk River and the Batza Tena source,” Rasic said. “I was happy to have solved a piece of the puzzle, and also for the chance to overlap in a small way with this noted explorer.”

A star on a map of Ӱ indicates the location of the Nowitna River.
Illustration by Ӱ Geophysical Institute
A star on a map of Ӱ indicates the location of the Nowitna River.

That naturalist and lover of Ӱ left his name behind on more Ӱ creatures and features than anyone else, including the Dall sheep and Dall’s porpoise.

His name also remains on Dall Glacier, Dall Point, Dall Island, Dall Lake, Dall Mountain, Dall Ridge, Dall River and Mount Dall.

Since the late 1970s, the University of Ӱ Fairbanks' Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the Ӱ research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.