
A Visit to Alaska Inspires a Climate Change Exhibit in Connecticut
'The trees were leaning in seemingly random directions because the permafrost underneath the soil was thawing from increasingly warmer temperatures,' he said. 'They were slumping as a result of not having a firm base. It almost felt like being in a bomb crater.'
Ksepka said that the setting illustrated the dramatic impact of global warming and profoundly affected him. 'I couldn't get the sight out of my head,' he said. 'Back home, I started looking into other the ways that climate change is shaping the Alaskan landscape through the de-stabilization of permafrost, changing vegetation patterns and loss of ice.'
That trip and the drunken forest are the impetus for the Bruce's exhibition 'On Thin Ice: Alaska's Warming Wilderness,' curated by Ksepka. It opened March 6 and will be on view until Oct. 19.
'It made a lot of sense to me to focus specifically on Alaska because it is on the front line in terms of climate change,' Ksepka said, in interviews by phone and video. 'Research has documented that air temperatures in Alaska are rising twice as fast as in other parts of the United States.'
According to Ksepka, what happens in Alaska will affect everyone no matter where they live because its 'permafrost stores unimaginably large amounts of carbon.'
Taxidermy animals in the exhibit — 17 in all — represent the wildlife that inhabits Alaska's wilderness and are the star attraction of 'On Thin Ice.' 'I wanted to show some of the animals threatened by global warming because they rely on these habitats to survive,' Ksepka said. 'They also bring in an emotional component to the damage it causes.'
A combination of pieces from the Bruce's permanent collection and loans from the Fairbanks Museum & Planetarium in Saint Johnsbury, Vt., the animals include a brown muskox, a gnarly-looking creature covered in shaggy hair that resembles a bison, and a snow fox, a mammal with short ears that changes its fur color from white to a grayish-brown, depending on the time of year.
The most majestic animal may be Charlie, a polar bear donated to the Bruce by SeaWorld in 2019 after his death. Weighing 948 pounds, Charlie is emblematic of the Arctic, Ksepka said. 'When you think of Alaska or any other Arctic environment, polar bears come to mind,' he said.
On a recent weekday afternoon, a small crowd, including school groups, families with young children and couples, studied the parade of wildlife and paused to snap pictures of their favorites. Charlie drew the most 'oohs and aahs.'
Roberta Tunick, a retired publisher who lives in Greenwich and is a museum regular, was among the attendees and brought her three young grandchildren along. She said that she wanted to educate them about the environment in an engaging way. 'They're fascinated by the animals and asking me questions about them,' she said. 'I'm reading a lot about climate change, and this exhibit brings it to life.'
Models of the landscapes where the animals live are also part of the show.
'One of the things I love to do in exhibitions is look at things from different scales, because it helps you tell a more compelling story that viewers can understand,' Ksepka said. 'The landscape models illustrate startling phenomena such as the 'browning' of the breathtaking spruce and birch forests due to climate-driven factors like forest fires.'
The Bruce's exhibition artist, Sean Murtha, created the depictions using materials such as plaster, clay, paint and epoxy resin.
Charlie poses, for instance, next to a swath of sea ice because polar bears hunt for food by standing on it and ambushing seals when they come to the surface to breathe.
In another example, the tundra wolf is displayed next to the notorious Harry Potter Lake, in northern Alaska. 'The lake drained in a single day in 2022 because of the melting permafrost, and many animals, including the tundra wolf, relied on it for drinking water,' Ksepka said.
As for the spruce and birch forest model, several animals, such as the black bear, the moose and the snowshoe hare, call it home.
Judging by the line of children impatiently waiting to play with the interactive displays included in 'On Thin Ice,' younger audiences aren't left out of the fun. They can touch animal fur, identify footprints and listen to the sounds of five species: muskox, polar bears, moose, arctic fox and caribou.
Like the Bruce, a growing number of museums are exploring climate change in their exhibitions, said Mallika Talwar, who advises museums on how to engage audiences with climate change and is the deputy director of partnerships for the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, a research center at Yale School of the Environment.
'We've found that many Americans want to learn about climate change through visiting museums because museums are a trusted source of information in a low-trust era,' she said. 'A growing number, including ones that focus on art and history, are feeling the responsibility to communicate on the topic as the impacts of it worsen.'
Talwar cited a 2020 survey conducted in collaboration between the Yale program and the Wild Center, a natural history museum in Tupper Lake, N.Y., of its museum goers. The results found that an overwhelming majority were concerned about climate change and led to the Wild Center's ongoing show, 'Climate Solutions.'
Other exhibitions on the topic are ever more prevalent. They include 'Climate of Hope,' at the Natural History Museum of Utah, which delves into climate change in the state, and 'Climate Action Heroes' at the National Children's Museum in Washington, D.C., which uses a gamelike approach to help children find a 'climate action superpower.'
Climate change exhibitions may not be new, but their scope has changed, according to Stephanie Shapiro, a co-founder and managing director of Environment & Culture Partners, a nonprofit that advises and collaborates with the cultural sector on becoming more sustainable. 'They've been going on for at least a decade, but today, they are much more common and expansive,' she said. Shapiro noted that many, such as 'Climate of Hope,' have an eye on the local environment, while larger museums typically put a lens on global warming as a whole.
She added that climate change exhibitions are also more action-oriented than in the past: 'They aim to not just educate, but to actually inspire people to take actions to be more sustainable.'
To that point, 'On Thin Ice' ends with a digital interactive display at which visitors can pledge an action to shrink their carbon footprint. They can choose to ride a bike instead of drive, for example, eat one vegetarian meal a week to save a significant amount of carbon a year, or buy an electric car.
Kspeka said that the display is meant to illustrate how anyone can play a role in minimizing environmental damage. 'Collectively, all our efforts will add up,' he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Wall Street Journal
17 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
Very Cold War: Brutal Arctic Conditions Are Testing U.S. and Allied Forces
Elite combat troops shred their physiques to look like Hollywood hunks. In the Arctic, that can kill you. The cold eats away at soldiers, who lose on average 3,000 calories a day while on exercises in the Arctic Circle—even while eating full rations and before they have taken part in any strenuous activity.


Vox
a day ago
- Vox
Scientists warn that climate change could wipe out more than half of these beloved animals
is an environmental correspondent at Vox, covering biodiversity loss and climate change. Before joining Vox, he was a senior energy reporter at Business Insider. Benji previously worked as a wildlife researcher. Wild reindeer search for food under the midnight sun on the Svalbard archipelago in the Arctic Circle. Ben Birchall/PA Wire It's bad enough that climate change is ruining the dream of a white Christmas for many people, as warming makes snow in some regions less likely. Now, apparently, it's coming for reindeer, too. Reindeer aren't just creatures of Christmas myth but real animals — a kind of deer that live in the Arctic, from northern Europe and Russia to North America, where they're commonly known as caribou. These animals are remarkably adapted to cold weather, sporting thick fur, a snout that warms the air they take in, and uniquely structured hooves that help them shovel snow to find food, such as lichen. But they've also survived bouts of Arctic warming that occurred thousands of years ago, thanks to their ability to travel long distances in search of colder habitats. These adaptations are, however, no match for modern climate change. The Arctic is warming quickly from a higher baseline temperature compared to natural fluctuations in the distant past. A reindeer runs in the snow in the Murmansk Region of Russia. Pavel Lvov/Sputnik via AP Over the last few decades, wild Arctic reindeer populations have declined by about two-thirds, from 5.5 million to around 1.9 million, largely due to warming, according to previous research. Rising temperatures can affect reindeer health directly — causing the animals to overheat and get sick — and indirectly by limiting their supply of food. Now, it's clear those declines will likely continue. A new study in the journal Science Advances found that if the world doesn't quickly rein in greenhouse gas emissions, the global wild reindeer population, including caribou, could plummet by nearly 60 percent by the end of the century. Those declines will be far more severe in North America, where they could exceed 80 percent, according to the study's models, which reconstructed 21,000 years of reindeer population data using fossil records, DNA, and other data sources. That's because North America is expected to lose more habitat that can support reindeer to warming than elsewhere, said Damien Fordham, a study author and researcher at the University of Adelaide. Even under a more modest emissions scenario — in which countries cut back what they spew into the atmosphere — the study projects steep population declines. You can see these results in the chart below, which shows projected declines based on a high and moderate emissions scenario, respectively. 'These results are absolutely concerning,' said Jennifer Watts, Arctic program director at the Woodwell Climate Research Center, a nonprofit research organization, who was not involved in the new study. 'Given how quickly and severely the Arctic is warming at present, the results from this study are not overly surprising, and should serve as yet another wake-up call for humans to curtail anthropogenic drivers of climate warming.' The study offers yet another example of how climate change is threatening biodiversity and how those threats in turn affect humans. Reindeer are not only a critical food source for some Arctic Indigenous communities — like Alaskan Natives and the Inuit people of North America — but also a cornerstone of their culture, similar to salmon or wolves for some tribal nations in other parts of the US. If major polluting nations, like the US, China, and India don't curtail their emissions, it could further endanger the food sovereignty of those communities. Beyond their direct impact on human well-being, reindeer also shape the tundra ecosystems — quite literally making them what they are — by limiting the growth of trees and shrubs, spreading seeds, and fertilizing the soil.


Newsweek
2 days ago
- Newsweek
US Shadows Chinese Ships Near Alaska
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The United States is monitoring a fleet of Chinese research vessels operating in Arctic waters near Alaska in support of "homeland defense and security," the Coast Guard said. China's Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a written request for comment. China has always conducted normal maritime activities in relevant waters in accordance with international law, Beijing's Embassy in Washington, D.C., previously told Newsweek. The Chinese research vessel Xue Long 2 sails over the United States Extended Continental Shelf (ECS) north of Alaska on August 13, 2025. The Chinese research vessel Xue Long 2 sails over the United States Extended Continental Shelf (ECS) north of Alaska on August 13, 2025. U.S. Coast Guard Why It Matters The Arctic, increasingly accessible because of climate change, has become a geopolitical and military frontier between the West and Russia, as well as China. The East Asian power has long called itself a "near-Arctic state" and an important stakeholder in regional affairs. Up to five Chinese research vessels have been deployed simultaneously on Arctic missions since earlier this month. This aligns with a three-year trend of increased Chinese maritime activity in the region, the U.S. Coast Guard said. What To Know In a press release on Saturday, the U.S. Coast Guard revealed that its Arctic District sent a C-130J long range surveillance aircraft from Kodiak Island—south of mainland Alaska—on Wednesday to query Chinese research vessels operating in what it called U.S. Arctic waters. The vessels were identified as the Xue Long 2, the Shen Hai Yi Hao, the Zhong Shan Da Xue Ji Di, the Ji Di, and the Tan Suo San Hao. It is unclear how they responded to the query. The U.S. Coast Guard said that, in conjunction with U.S. Northern Command and Alaskan Command, it constantly monitors foreign vessels operating in and near U.S. waters. Northern Command provides command and control of the Pentagon's homeland defense efforts, while Alaskan Command conducts those missions within its area of operations. U.S. waters include the territorial sea, exclusive economic zone (EEZ), and extended continental shelf (ECS), which extend up to 13.8 miles, 230 miles, and beyond 230 miles from the coastline, respectively. According to captions on photos provided by the U.S. Coast Guard, all five Chinese research vessels were operating over the U.S. ECS when they were spotted by the C-130J aircrew. Amid growing "strategic global competition" in the Arctic, the U.S. Coast Guard said it recently commissioned two ships in Alaska—the polar icebreaker USCGC Storis and the fast response cutter USCGC Earl Cunningham—to strengthen the U.S. presence in the region. The ships' commissioning increased the ability to control, secure and defend Alaska's maritime borders and approaches, Arctic District commander Rear Admiral Bob Little said. What People Are Saying Rear Admiral Bob Little, commander of the U.S. Coast Guard Arctic District, said in a press release on Saturday: "As we continue to grow our surface fleet, we utilize our aviation resources which play a vital role in countering foreign malign influence." The U.S. Coast Guard said in a press release on August 8: "The presence of these [Chinese] vessels is consistent with a three-year trend of increased activity from Chinese research vessels operating in the U.S. Arctic. Last year, three Chinese research vessels conducted research operations north of the Bering Strait." What Happens Next It remains unclear how long the Chinese research vessels will operate in the Arctic near Alaska. The U.S. and its ally Canada may increase their presence in the region in response.