24-Year-Old Mother and 1-Year-Old Son Killed in Alaska Polar Bear Attack

Mar. 16, 2025

The victims of apolar bear attack on Tuesdayin the remote Alaskan village of Wales include a 24-year-old woman and her 1-year-old son.

As the attack unfolded, according to the Associated Press, community members and employees from the school emerged to try to scare the animal away with shovels. The polar bear chased them back into the school, prompting the school’s principal to slam the door to keep it out.

“The bear tried to enter with them,” Susan R. Nedza, the chief school administrator for the Bering Strait School District, told theAnchorage Daily News.

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Wales, a remote town of approximately 150 people, is located on the Seward Peninsula and is the westernmost point of the U.S. mainland, abutting the Bering Strait.

While experts believe that receding ice in the area may be to blame for the bear’s interaction with the town, aGoFundMe account for the family’s next-of-kinstates that this was the first fatal polar bear attack in Alaska in over 30 years.

According to the fundraiser, Myomick, Clyde, and their immediate family were living in the Wales school after facing recent electrical issues in their home. The funds will aid their family in repairing their home and moving back into their residence.

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In an update on Thursday,the Alaska Department of Public Safety indicatedthat an Alaska State Trooper and a representative from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game traveled to Wales to investigate the attack after poor weather conditions prevented them from making the trip the day prior.

As of Thursday, the remains of Clyde and Myomick were transported to the State Medical Examiner’s Office for autopsy.

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A 2017study on polar bear attacksfound they were more likely to happen during the months of July through December when ice covers the least amount of area. In addition, polar bears arelisted as a threatened speciesunder the Endangered Species Act due to the “current and predicted future declines” of sea ice, according to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

source: people.com