Methodology:
Bright, William, and James Kari. 1996. Hydronymic Districts by Copyright Law, (Title 17, U.S. Code, see Kari 1996a, p. 253).
Kari, James. 1996. A Preliminary View of Hydronymic Districts in Northern Athabaskan Prehistory. Names 44:253-271.
Kari, James. 2010. The Concept of Geolinguistic Conservatism in Na-Dene Prehistory. Anthropological Papers of the University of Alaska. New Series, vol. 5:194-222.
Kari, James. 2011. A Case Study in Ahtna Athabascan Geographic Knowledge. In Landscape in Language, Transdisciplinary Perspectives, ed. by D.M. Mark, A.G. Turk, N. Burenhult & D. Stea. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 239-260.
Kari, James. 2017. Advances in Dene Ethnogeographic Research. Working Papers in Dene Languages, 2016 Yellowknife NWT. No.13:35-50. ANLC.
Kari, James. 2019. The Resilience of Dene Generative Geography, Considering "the Nen' Yese' Ensemble." Alaska Journal of Anthropology vol. 17(1-2):44-76.
Smith, Gerad. 2020. Historical Linguistic and Ethno-Geographic Perspectives of the Alaskan Dene. In Ethnoarchaeology of the Middle Tanana Valley, Alaska. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks.
Smith, Gerad. 2022. The Gift of the Middle Tanana: Dene Antiquity in the Alaskan Interior. Lexington Books, Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Lanham, Maryland.
Primary Research Publications (for primary place name data, see the bibliographies within each of the following reports):
Anderson, Douglas B., Wanni W. Anderson, Ray Bane, Richard K. Nelson, and Nita Sheldon Towarak. [1977] 1998. Kuuvaŋmiut Subsistence: Traditional Eskimo Life in the Latter Twentieth Century. US Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Washington, DC.
Andrews, Elizabeth F. 1977. Report on the Cultural Resources of the Doyon Region of Central Alaska. Occasional Paper No. 5. Cooperative Parks Study Unit, University of Alaska, Fairbanks.
Caulfield, Richard, Walter Peter, and Clarence Alexander. 1983. Gwich'in Athabaskan Place Names of the Upper Yukon-Porcupine Region, Alaska (ADF&G Technical Paper no. 83). Fairbanks.
Clark, Donald, and Anne McFadyen Clark.1993. Batza Tena: Trail to Obsidian. Archaeological Survey of Canada Mercury Series Paper 147. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Ottawa.
de Laguna, Frederica. 1947. The Prehistory of Northern North America as Seen From the Yukon. Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology No. 3. Menasha, Wisconsin: Society for American Archaeology.
Easton, Norman A. 2001. Getting to Know the Neighbourhood: Upper Tanana Place Names and Navigation in the Scottie Creek Valley of the Yukon-Alaska Borderlands. Alaska Native Language Archives. Fairbanks.
Easton, Norman A. 2008. Upper Tanana Place Names Database, Villages, Camps, Mountains, Lakes, & Streams. Yukon College. Whitehorse.
Evanoff, Karen E. 2010. Dena'ina Ełnena, A Celebration. National Park Service. Anchorage.
Gudgel-Holmes, Dianne, 1991. Native Placenames of the Kantishna Drainage, Alaska: Kantishna Oral History Project. Report prepared for the National Park Service. Healy.
Hadleigh West, Frederick. 1963. The Netsi Kutchin: An Essay in Human Ecology. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College, Baton Rouge.
Hanson, Teresa. In Press. The Subsistence, Stories, and Place Names of the Upper Kuskokwim River. National Park Service, Denali.
Hargus, Sharon. 2000. Ft. Ware (Kwadacha) Sekani Dictionary. Unpublished manuscript.
Jetté, Jules. 1910. On the geographical names of the Ten'a. Ms.
Jones, Eliza. 1986. Koyukon Ethnogeography. Alaska Historical Commission Studies in History No. 117. Anchorage.
Jones, Eliza. 2008. Middle Koyukuk River of Alaska: An Atlas of Fishing Places and Traditional Place Names. Yukon River Drainage Fisheries Association, Anchorage.
Juneby, Willy, and John T . Ritter. 1978. Place Names of the Eagle Region. Alaska Native Language Archive. Fairbanks.
Kari, James. 1979. Kuskokwim River Place Names. Alaska Native Language Archive. Fairbanks.
Kari, James. 1983. Tanacross Place Names List (Preliminary Version). Alaska Native Language Archive. Fairbanks.
Kari, James. 1997. Upper Tanana Place Names Lists and Maps. Wrangell-St. Elias National Park. Copper Center.
Kari, James. 1999. Draft Final Report. Native Place Names in Denali National Park and Preserve. Report prepared for the National Park Service. Healy.
Kari, James. 2001. Deg Hit'an-Holikachuk Place Names. Alaska Native Language Archive. Fairbanks.
Kari, James. 2011. Tanacross Place Names. Fairbanks, Alaska Native Language Archive. Pdf Ms.
Kari, James. 2013. Ahtna Place Names Lists and Maps, version 3.1. Alaska Native Language Archive. Fairbanks.
Kari, James. 2015. Middle Tanana Ethnogeographic Reconstruction. Report to Tanana-Yukon Historical Society and Fort Wainwright U.S. Army, Cultural Resources Office. Fairbanks.
Kari, James. 2015. Upper Kuskokwim Dene Place Names Lists, version 3.31, February 16, 2015. Alaska Native Language Center. Fairbanks.
Kari, James (editor). 2018. The Geographical Research of Jules Jetté. Unpublished manuscript. Tanana Chiefs Conference and ANLC.
Kari, James, and Alan Boraas (editors). 1991. A Dena’ina Legacy-K’tl’egh’I Sukdu: The Collected Writings of Peter Kalifornsky. Alaska Native Language Archive. Fairbanks.
Kari, James, and James A. Fall. 2016. Shem Pete’s Alaska: The Territory of the Upper Cook Inlet Dena’ina (3rd Edition). University of Alaska Press. Fairbanks.
Kari, James and Rick Thoman. 2012. Tanacross Place Names Lists. Alaska Native Language Center. Fairbanks
Kari, James, Gary Holton, Brett Parks, and Robert Charlie. 2012. Lower Tanana Athabascan Place Names. Alaska Native Language Center. Fairbanks.
Kari, James, and Adeline Peter Raboff. 2011. Compilation of Yukon Flats Athabascan Place Names for Stevens Village, Beaver, Birch Creek and Fort Yukon. Dena'inaq' Titaztunt and Arivahan. Alaska Native Language Archive. Fairbanks.
Kaska Elders. 1997. Guzāgi K'ū́gé': Our Language Book: Nouns: Kaska, Mountain Slavey and Sekani. Arctic Star Printing, Whitehorse, 1997.
Krauss, Michael. n.d. Eyak Placenames. On file at the Alaska Native Language Archives.
Kritsch, Ingrid and Alestine André. 1994. Gwichya Gwich’in place names up the Arctic Red River and south of the Mackenzie River, Gwich’in Settlement Area, N.W.T. Gwich’in Social and Cultural Institute.
Matesi, Joe. 2016. Dinjii Zhuh K’yàa Nan Goorì’ (Gwich'in Athabascan Place Names). Fairbanks, Alaska Native Language Center. Book, maps, and CD with hyperlinked soundfiles.
Matthew, Margaret, Dave Lacey, James Kari and Randy Mayo. 1999. Stevens Village Land Use Plan, Ethnogeography of Traditional Lands, and Integrated Resource Management Plan. Stevens Village Council.
McCloskey, Sarah, and Benjamin Jones, 2014. Mapping Traditional Place Names along the Koyukuk River-Koyukuk, Huslia, and Hughes, Western Interior Alaska. Fact Sheet 2014-3105.
McIlwraith, Thomas. 2012. We Are Still Didene: Stories of Hunting and History from Northern British Columbia. University of Toronto Press, Toronto.
Michael, Henry N., ed. 1967. Lieutenant Zagoskin’s Travels in Russian America, 1842-1844. University of Toronto Press. Toronto.
Mishler, Craig W. 1986. Born with the River: An Ethnographic History of Alaska's Goodpaster and Big Delta Indians. Report of Investigations 86-14. State of Alaska Department of Natural Resources Division of Geological and Geophysical Survey. Juneau.
Mishler, Craig W. 2008. Tanacross Place Names. Unpublished Manuscript.
Nelson, Richard. 1983. Make Prayers to the Raven. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
Nelson, Richard, Kathleen Mautner, and G. Ray Banel. 1982. Tracks in the Wildland: A Portrayal of Koyukon and Nunamiut Subsistence. Anthropology and Historic Preservation Cooperative Park Studies Unit, University of Alaska, Fairbanks.
Nielson, Jon M. 1977. Beaufort Sea Study-Historic and Subsistence Site Inventory: A Preliminary Cultural Resource Assessment. North Slope Borough, Barrow, Alaska.
Peter, Katherine. 1981. Arctic Village Place Names. Fairbanks, Alaska Native Language Archive. Alaska Native Language Archives. Fairbanks.
Pulo, Tupo and Michelle Robert. n.d. Map 2: Kaiyuh Place Names, Koyukon and Other Local Place Names in the Kaiyuh Flats Area of West Central Alaska. Ms. ANLA.
Robert, Michel. 1984. Trapping Patterns in the Vicinity of the Kaiyuh Flats, West-Central Alaska. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Subsistence Division, Technical Paper 89.. Fairbanks.
Sidney, Angela. 1980. Place Names of the Tagish Region, Southern Yukon. Compiled for the Yukon Native Languages Project, Council for Yukon Indians, Whitehorse.
Tom, Gertie. 1987. Èkeyi Gyò Cho Chú, My Country, Big Salmon River: Place Names of the Big Salmon River Region, Yukon Territory. Yukon Native Language Center, Whitehorse.
Yukon Native Language Center. 2012. Dákeyi (Our Country) Teaching Guide. Reprint 2012. Yukon Native Language Center, Whitehorse.
Yukon River Drainage Fisheries Association. 2008. Middle Koyukuk River of Alaska, an Atlas of Fishing Places and Traditional Place Names. Anchorage.