RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Japan’s World War II on Kiska Island: Previously Undocumented Features on the Vega Bay Coastline JF Arctic Anthropology JO Arctic Anthropol FD University of Wisconsin Press SP 149 OP 166 DO 10.3368/aa.57.2.149 VO 57 IS 2 A1 Funk, Caroline A1 Corbett, Debra A1 Harmsen, Hans A1 Goranson, Steve YR 2020 UL http://aa.uwpress.org/content/57/2/149.abstract AB The Japanese occupation of Kiska Island in the Western Aleutians was far more comprehensive than previously reported or archaeologically documented. Remarkably wellpreserved World War II Japanese military tunnels, entrenchments, structural remains, and communications networks are located throughout the southern coastal bays and coves of the island. These features were constructed in 1942–1943 by Imperial Japanese Army and Imperial Japanese Navy troops stationed on Kiska during the Aleutian Operation. The features and their associated material assemblages provide an opportunity to expand interpretations of the human landscape of war in the western Aleutians through first-phase archaeological descriptions enriched by information from historical documents.