The Arctic’s climate has been changing. Spring thaws are earlier. Fall freeze-ups are later. Sea ice is shrinking. Unfamiliar species of plants and animals are appearing. Intense storms are more frequent.
Explore the Arctic’s changing climate. Discover what these changes mean for the Arctic, its wildlife, its people—and the rest of the planet.
This web site incorporates images and information from the Arctic: A Friend Acting Strangely exhibition developed by the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, which was on display at the Museum through November 2006. The exhibition puts a human face on warming in the Arctic by exploring how changes have been observed and documented by scientists and polar residents alike.
In The News
In subzero Antarctica, Zoo scientists study the hardy metabolism of the Weddell seal
How does a 150-pound human persuade a 1,200- pound seagoing mammal to lie still for a bit of bloodwork? In the wild? In the case of a mother Weddell seal, the answer is simple, if inelegant. “You put a bag over her head,” says Olav Oftedal, a nutritionist at the Smithsonian’s National Zoological Park who recently returned from studying Weddell seals in Antarctica.