ERA is in the process of being migrated to Scholaris, a Canadian shared institutional repository service (https://scholaris.ca). Deposits and changes to existing ERA items and collections are frozen until migration is complete. Please contact erahelp@ualberta.ca for further assistance
Circumpolar Digital Image Collection
The Circumpolar Digital Image Collection is a collection of photos, slides, other images and contributions shared by many of the University of Alberta’s polar researchers. Images in the collection may be used for teaching and research purposes. For any other use, please contact the Canadian Circumpolar Institute.
Items in this Collection
- 428Campbell, Sandy
- 175Seale, Linda N.
- 9Beaudreau, Diane, biologist, artist
- 3Alberta Aviation Museum
- 3Inuvialuit Cultural Resource Centre
- 3Ivanova, Semenova Polina
- 134Photographs
- 56Antarctic Peninsula
- 56Canada, Northwest Territories, Yellowknife
- 37Russia, St. Petersburg
- 24Arctic flowers
- 24September, 2016
-
2024-06-08
This tea-house is near the entrance to the Tromsø Arctic-Alpine Botanical Garden. It has a grey exterior with white trim and a slate roof with tubular snow retainers. There is an outdoor seating area to the left and another to the right in the garden beyond the tea-house. In the foreground is a...
-
2021-08-28
Fine china objects (plates, cups and saucers, bells, mugs, thimbles) are all popular items in the souvenir trade. Some souvenir stores have china objects decorated with themes local to their region. This cup and saucer were made and decorated in England, but decorated for the Yukon tourist...
-
2024-06-09
This historic home, Telnesgården, in Tromsø, Norway was built in approximately 1865. It was occupied initially by a master shoemaker, Hans Løkke, then a master painter, A. Larsen, and a cathedral organist, Helmer Telnes. Polar explorer Hjalmar Johansen rented this house in 1903. The exterior...
-
2015-05-10
The Indigenous Roots within Canadian Soil This poster answers the question \"How can educators motivate students to learn Aboriginal languages?\" The answer is to return to the original Aboriginal names of Canada's provinces and territories before European contact enabling Aboriginal students...