Staff members looks at artwork entitled Silent Messenger (Victoria Jones/PA)
More than 250 objects highlighting how Arctic peoples have adapted to the region’s harsh climate have gone on display at the British Museum.
The London museum’s Arctic: Culture And Climate exhibition explores the history of the indigenous population through the lens of climate change and weather.
An amauti and a kayaq used by Inuit and Aleut hunters (Victoria Jones/PA)
Among the items are an amauti, a parka with a baby carrier built into the hood, and a kayaq used by Inuit and Aleut hunters during the 1800s.
Also on display is a waterproof whaling suit from a Kalaallit hunter, the only complete one of its kind in the world, dated 1834.
Woven Inuit clothing that form an artwork entitled Atigiit, Silapaat (Victoria Jones/PA)
One artwork entitled Silent Messenger represents an Inuit land marker.
The display also includes various sledges which are suitable for different types of snow.
A Kalaallit whaling suit (Victoria Jones/PA)
Also included in the exhibition are a number of videos of interviews with indigenous people discussing their experiences of the changing Arctic climate.
The British Museum’s Citi exhibition Arctic: Culture And Climate runs from October 22 to February 21.
British Museum exhibition sheds light on Arctic’s changing climate