Āé¶¹Ō““F photo by Tom Moran.
Kwigillingok Elder David John speaks as part of a panel at the Western Alaska Interdisciplinary
Science Conference in Bethel, Alaska, April 7, 2026. To the left of the photo is Kwigillingok
Elder Fred Phillip. To the right is Kipnuk Elder Tim Samson and Jessica Lewis-Nicori,
originally from Chefornak.
By Tom Moran
David John, a Yupāik Elder from Kwigillingok, sat before an audience of scientists, students and residents and recounted the day the land became the ocean.
Speaking entirely in Yupāik during the 2026 Western Alaska Interdisciplinary Science Conference in Bethel, John described holing up in his home when ex-Typhoon Halong tore through his village last October. At one point, his son looked at his GPS and told John that their coordinates were changing. They werenāt just weathering the storm, they were adrift in the current.
āHe was in awe of the wind,ā said Alice Rearden of Calista Education and Culture, who translated for John. āHe said the land became like the oceanā¦and he said itās a good thing the wind didnāt shift to the north because if it had shifted, they would have drifted out into the ocean.ā
Shortly after Johnās visceral account, the room shifted focus from narrative to data. Aviva Braun of the National Weather Service and Rick Thoman of Āé¶¹Ō““Fās Alaska Center for Climate Assessment and Preparedness delivered slideshows filled with ensemble forecasts and storm track maps. To a casual observer, their presentations might have seemed worlds apart from Johnās. But to the record-breaking 160 WAISC attendees, they were two halves of the same whole.
A continuing tradition
WAISC is the brainchild of the late Todd Radenbaugh, a professor of environmental science at the Āé¶¹Ō““F Bristol Bay Campus in Dillingham who organized the initial conference in 2008. The annual event is now led by Alaska Sea Grant, a federal-university partnership program based at Āé¶¹Ō““F. WAISCās location rotates among off-the-road system Western Alaska communities, including Dillingham, Nome, Bethel, Unalaska, Kotzebue and Naknek. Each conference centers on issues specific to its particular region.
āThereās always this place-based aspect to it because the goal is to bring in community members from the place where it takes place, but also the outlying communities, and to engage with the scientists in a conversation,ā said Davin Holen, a coastal resilience specialist for Alaska Sea Grant. āThatās always been what makes this conference unique.ā
Local vendors, from left, Carolyn Iverson and Valerie Thomas sell their wares during poster sessions at the Western Alaska Interdisciplinary Science Conference in Bethel, Alaska, April 7, 2026.
Bethel is a hub community of about 6,300 people located on the Kuskokwim River, roughly 50 miles from its outlet into the Bering Sea. Given the location, itās unsurprising that the central topic of the conference was ex-Typhoon Halong. The storm largely destroyed the coastal communities of Kipnuk and Kwigillingok, significantly damaged more than a dozen other villages and displaced 1,600 people.
āI think Halong and the urgency of an entire village being wiped out, people just thought, this is important,ā said Chris Maio, a Āé¶¹Ō““F professor of geography and repeat WAISC attendee. āThis is not just a, āLet's meet and share some ideas and stuff.ā There's almost an emergency to it, to strengthening collaborations and determination to see this work go forward.ā
Discussions of Halong and other recent storms dominated the first few conference sessions, which also served to illustrate another unique aspect of the conference: the weight given to traditional local knowledge. The event opened with a panel of John and other Yupāik Elders describing their own experiences with Halong, as well as with climate and weather in general. John shared how people of his village charted changes in weather. A fog bank to the northwest presages a windstorm, he said. Trees get darker before a warm spell and make snapping noises before a cold one.
Aviva Braun of the National Weather Service in Anchorage presents on ex-Typhoon Halong at the Western Alaska Interdisciplinary Science Conference in Bethel, Alaska, April 7, 2026.
āWhen you're bringing in researchers, itās just natural to bring in the experts on the land and the culture and the language,ā said Basile. āThe Yupāik people are the original scientists of this place. They're the experts on the weather around here. Even the language has evolved around the weather. And so it makes sense in my brain to just pair the two together.ā
While the event exposed researchers to a local perspective on Halong, it benefited locals as well, offering some an opportunity to step back and examine the storm from an objective distance.
āI was here (during Halong) working with people who were evacuated from the communities, and so I was in response mode and didnāt have a clear understanding of what actually happened,ā said attendee Melanie Fredericks, who directs the Family Services Division for the Association of Village Council Presidents in Bethel. āAnd so the presentations about ex-Typhoon Halong were helpful for me, just in my processing and understanding.ā
āNarratives from a Resilient Coastā
While Halong loomed large at WAISC, it was ultimately just one topic in a three-day conversation that exemplified the term āinterdisciplinary.ā The theme of the event was āNarratives from a Resilient Coast,ā a focus that both highlighted the storytelling bent of the conference and invited a huge breadth of subject matter.
The first day was dedicated to climate, landscapes and ecosystems in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, with topics including river erosion, fisheries management and sea-level tracking tools. The keynote address described the Nunalleq archaeological site in the village of Quinhagak.
From there, the subject matter got more eclectic. For example, a session called āUnearthing Stories from the Landā consisted of four presentations:Grade school and middle school students with Bethelās āDirt Bustersā Lego robotics team described an archaeology activity book they created. Four enthusiastic Bethel birders listed avian species viewable around town. A graduate student from the University of Northern Iowa discussed climate impacts to the Iditarod. And another presenter summarized efforts by the local public radio station to digitize interviews with Elders.
āWe wanted to stick with this theme of story, because when science is paired with story, itās just so much more accessible,ā noted Basile. āAnd so that theme allowed more topics in.ā
Proprietor Tim Meyers speaks during a field trip to Meyers Farm at the Western Alaska Interdisciplinary Science Conference in Bethel, Alaska, April 8, 2026.
Attendees also partook of field trips to a local organic farm or the headquarters of the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge. Others attended workshops on science illustration, skin sewing or water security. For some participants, the diversity of the conference offerings was a highlight of the event.
āI keep telling everybody, this is like a vacation for me. Iām just not thinking about my regular day job, like everything I do in a typical day,ā noted Fredericks. āBut itās still very relatable to what I should know and what can be helpful to know in my day-to-day.ā
āVacationā is perhaps not the first word that sprang to mind for some of the out-of-town participants, many of whom were getting their first glimpse of Alaska off the road system. Walking to the conference venue, the well-appointed Yupiit Piciryarait Cultural Center on Āé¶¹Ō““Fās Kuskokwim Campus, was an exercise in dodging both abyssal spring puddles and the splash from passing pickups and ATVs.
A truck heads down the Kuskokwim River ice road in Bethel, Alaska, April 9, 2026.
Bethel itself is a disorderly assemblage of small houses, imposing tribal and agency buildings, above-ground water pipes and gaily painted dumpsters, all fronting a rapidly thawing channel of the Kuskokwim. The early April conference brought with it snow, sleet, rain, wind and sunshine in equal measure.
The impact on faraway attendees can be very different than attending a conference in urban Alaska, noted Renee Fredericks, a native of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (and Melanie Fredericksā cousin) who works for the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium in Anchorage. She described explaining a honey bucket (the flush-toilet alternative in places without piped water) to some conference-goers, and also pondered the sticker shock some probably experienced when they opened a restaurant menu.
āWhen you're out here, you see how people are living, and itās just so different from a city that you live in in the Lower 48,ā she said. āA pictureās worth a thousand words, but, boy, being here in the middle of it is worth way more.ā
The next WAISC will take place in spring 2027 in Nome.
Tom Moran is a science writer for Alaska Sea Grant.

