The Walrus Islands (Russian: Моржовые острова) are a group of craggy coastal islands in the Bering Sea, close to the northern shores of Bristol Bay, Alaska at the entrance to Togiak Bay.
A part of the island group is also of archaeological importance, with numerous deeply stratified sites covering 6,000 years of human use.
The highest point is 69 m. Administratively these islands belong to the Dillingham Census Area, Alaska.
On January 11, 2017, President Barack Obama announced the designation of the island group as a National Historic Landmark District.
The island contains a copious record of archaeological evidence of human occupation dating back to the Norton Tradition 6,000 years ago,[4] about the time Bering Sea level rose to separate the Islands from the mainland, and the more recent Thule Tradition.