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Geographic distribution of northern peoples of the USSR, 1970 and 1979

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2009

Gunnar Knapp
Affiliation:
Institute of Social and Economic Research, University of Alaska Anchorage, Anchorage, Alaska 99508, USA

Abstract

Data on the geographic distribution of native peoples of the Soviet North, published for the 1970and 1979 censuses (Tsentral'noyestatisticheskoye upravleniye SSSR 1973,1984), are summarized by administrative division and nationality for comparison with data for 1959, 1970 and 1979 given in Polar Record 20 (125): 169–70 (1980). Of the Chukchi, Dolgany, Eskimosy, Itel'meny, Koryaki, Mansi, Nganasany, Saamy, and Yakuty, more than 70% were reported to live within a single northern administrative division in 1979. More widely distributed were the Aleuty, Evenki, Eveny, Karely, Khanty, Sel'kupy and Yukagiry. The total population of northern native peoples was 915,096 in 1970 and 951, 471 in 1979.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1992

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References

Tsentral'noye statisticheskoye upravleniye SSSR. 1973. Itogi Vsesoyuznoy perepisi naseleniya 1970 goda. Tom IV. Natsional'nyy sostav naseleniya SSSR, soyuznykh i avtonomnykh respublik, krayev, oblasteyi natsional'nykh okrugov. [National status of the population of the USSR, union and autonomous republics, krays, oblasts and national okrugs.] Moscow, Tsentral'noye statisticheskoye upravleniye SSSR.Google Scholar
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