MarketList of ghost towns in Alaska
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List of ghost towns in Alaska

This is an incomplete list of ghost towns in Alaska. Ghost towns can include sites in various states of disrepair and abandonment. Some sites no longer have any trace of civilization and have reverted to wilderness. Other sites are unpopulated but still have standing buildings. Some sites may even have a sizable, though small, population, but there are far fewer citizens than in their grander historic past.

Classification
, the remains of which are buried beneath a suburb of Fairbanks with nothing visible today|198x198px Barren site • Sites no longer in existence • Sites that have been destroyed • Covered with water • Reverted to pasture • May have a few difficult to find foundations/footings at most |189x189px Neglected site • Only rubble left • Roofless building ruins • Buildings or houses still standing, but majority are roofless . Tourists visit the many remaining buildings, but many caretakers live in nearby McCarthy.|211x211px Abandoned site • Buildings or houses still standing • Buildings and houses all abandoned • No population, except caretaker • Site no longer in existence except for one or two buildings, for example an old church or grocery store Semi-abandoned site • Buildings or houses still standing • Buildings and houses largely abandoned • Few residents • Many abandoned buildings • Small population is still inhabited, but has not appeared on the census since 1940. Historic community • Buildings or houses still standing • Still a busy community • Smaller than its boom years • Population has decreased dramatically, to one fifth or less == Table ==
Gallery
File:King Island 1 2010-09-08.jpg|Ugiuvak, abandoned Inupiat stilt village, in 2010. The large white building near the bottom of the slope is the former Bureau of Indian Affairs school. File:Dyea Alaska (1).jpg|One of three graveyards at Dyea, this one composed almost entirely of victims of a single Avalanche in 1898 File:Flat AK 1911.jpg|Flat, August 1, 1911 File:Dyea-waterfront-1898.jpg|The waterfront at Dyea during the Klondike Gold Rush ==References==
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