Caribou | AMNH https://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/permanent/north-american-mammals/caribou-grant-caribou
Their principal home is tundra—land that is too cold
Their principal home is tundra—land that is too cold
Their principal home is tundra—land that is too cold
Their principal home is tundra—land that is too cold
dioramas of their natural habitats, from the Canadian tundra
dioramas of their natural habitats, from the Canadian tundra
almost everywhere—from tropical forests to frozen tundra
almost everywhere—from tropical forests to frozen tundra
Global climate change will have winners as well as losers. The widespread and adaptable red fox has expanded its range northward over the past 70 years, but the fox’s impact on its northern neighbors remains uncertain.
animals can’t: in bitterly cold and often food-scarce tundra
John Karavias is an online instructor for Seminars on Science, the Museum’s online professional learning program for educators.
team of scientists to collect core samples of the Tundra
In this video, a scientist explores Alaska’s boreal forest to learn about its role in Earth’s climate.
forest, and the carbon-rich layer of permafrost in the tundra
The mating season for caribou, called the rut, has begun. Herd members are gathering in the open so they can find and compete for mates.
(2,190 meters), Level Mountain’s broad slope is a tundra
Journey thousands of meters below sea level to examine the underwater geysers that spew hot, mineral-rich water from beneath the seafloor … and that are host to an amazing diversity of life.
looked on Earth, from the driest desert to the coldest tundra
Journey thousands of meters below sea level to examine the underwater geysers that spew hot, mineral-rich water from beneath the seafloor … and that are host to an amazing diversity of life.
looked on Earth, from the driest desert to the coldest tundra
Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is less than 100 miles from Prudhoe Bay, the nation’s largest oil field. Drilling in the ANWR remains a sensitive topic.
aside nearly 20 million acres of Alaska’s North Slope tundra