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A man standing on a pile of heaved ice
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An Inuit hunter with a gun on a cliff overlooking a bay
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An Inuit Hunt, After Cutting Up Two Walruses on an Iceberg
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The perspective of European views observing the Angekkok's beliefs in supernatural beings
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Portrait of Robert E. Peary
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Four Inuit children face and cling to four adults facing the camera. One child to the side stares at the camera with a hand in their mouth.
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A color illustration of a caribou jumping over an Inuit girl in traditional dress
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This is a lantern slide, though not explicitly based off of one photograph, that depicts a vast Arctic landscape with a single explorer resting against a block of ice.
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This piece by Sheouak Petaulassie is a stonecut print on laid Japan paper, depicting various animals walking across overlaid landscapes.
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A soapstone sculpture of a woman carrying a butchered animal.
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Ahgupuk uses pen and ink wash on bleached seal skin, a border of red alder-dyed reindeer skin. He depicts a winter scene of a caribou herd as the focus, with smaller landscapes of animals and Iñupiaq lifestyles in each corner.
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Photo from Rauner
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various views of the coast near Cape Parry
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Excerpt from Captain Graah with the Omerikkans
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A photograph showing a Canadian Arctic Expedition with three unidentified indigenous individuals.
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From Stefansson Collection; image of sled and people stopping
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Depiction of a Greenland landscape with a church at the focal point
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This photo depicts Inuits gathered around a table eating a Christmas dinner. There are many British flags and another flag in the background.
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A hunter uses a bow and arrow to shoot a horned animal.
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This is a lantern slide originally based off of a photograph, which depicts a splintered ice landscape being navigated by a single explorer.
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A photograph taken of a fishing camp with Inuit men, women, and women.
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This British reward poster advertises rewards for anyone who discovers the fate of the Erebus and the Terror.
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This map of the Polaris Expedition appeared in the 1874 novel "Arctic Experiences" that detailed the expedition.
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This drawing from the 1874 book "Arctic Experiences" depicts the infamous and potentially suspicious death of Captain Hall, the leader of the Polaris Expedition. It is possible that arsenic poisoning, foul play, or some combination of the two contributed to his untimely demise.
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A map of Baffin Bay and the surrounding landmasses, with the Northwest Passage shown in red.