Science
Exhibition explores Australia's 'incredible fascination' with Antarctica
Key Points
Over 200 artefacts from more than 100 years of Antarctic exploration on display at National Museum of Australia Tue 30 Jun 2026 at 4:00pm In short: A new exhibition is aiming to show the human effort behind Australia's work in Antarctica through objects from the National Antarctic Heritage Collection. It features more than 200 objects and artefacts from over a century of Antarctic exploration, most of which are on display for the first time.
Over 200 artefacts from more than 100 years of Antarctic exploration on display at National Museum of Australia
Tue 30 Jun 2026 at 4:00pm
In short:
A new exhibition is aiming to show the human effort behind Australia's work in Antarctica through objects from the National Antarctic Heritage Collection.
It features more than 200 objects and artefacts from over a century of Antarctic exploration, most of which are on display for the first time.
What's next?
The Antarctica exhibition will run from July 1 to October 11 at the National Museum of Australia in Canberra.
Nerilie Abram has gone where most people will never go, and has done it five times.
For the chief scientist of the Australian Antarctic Program, the harsh and icy continent is an endless source of fascination and wonder.
"Antarctica really gets into your blood,"Professor Abram said.
The climate scientist has been part of crucial Antarctic research expeditions, including to the rapidly melting Denman Glacier.
But it is the realities of day-to-day survival in one of the world's most extreme environments she thinks will surprise people most.
"I'll get to Antarctica and then fly out onto the ice sheet, and we're just there with a really small team, living in tents on the ice for months at a time," Professor Abram said.
"You have to pay really close attention to the weather forecasts … do we need to make sure everything is tied down because there might be a blizzard coming through?
"Even when it comes to dinner time, going and digging in the snow and pulling out a vacuum pack of food and going, 'Oh, what are we going to eat tonight?'"
'One of the greatest Antarctic collections in the world'
Australia has an enduring connection to Antarctica, but visiting the frozen continent is out of reach for most.
A major new Antarctica exhibition at the National Museum of Australia is giving visitors a chance to explore life on the ice, and the stories behind more than a century of exploration.
The exhibition features more than 200 objects and artefacts, donated by the Australian Antarctic Division.
"It was a huge and vast series of treasures," senior curator Laura Cook said.
"And really, [it's] probably one of the greatest Antarctic-related collections in the world."
Many of the objects have never been on display before.
They include a range of oversnow vehicles, including the unique 1975 Mole Mink, which was manufactured in Sydney using Holden engines but constructed by technicians in Antarctica.
There is a 1955 barge caravan used as temporary accommodation during the construction of Mawson station, and a mammoth 8.5 tonne tractor described as the "workhorse" of the Australian Antarctic Program, and one of the heaviest objects the museum has housed.
A sled and skis used by Australian explorer Cecil Madigan in 1912 are also on show.
So too is a baggy yellow jacket worn by Diana Patterson, the first woman to lead an Australian Antarctic station.
"Diana had to take a smaller size because at the time she joined the division, there wasn't specific clothing made for women,"Dr Cook said.
There are 12 taxidermied sled dogs, bred between the 50s and 90s, who formed deep bonds with isolated expeditioners.
Visitors can also see ration packs and a bottle of beer brewed in Antarctica in 1969, an activity that was a popular pastime for decades.
Some of the objects are more personal, including diaries and letters from explorers.
"When I think of all the fellows slaving in officers in cities when there is all this beautiful God's world to explore and all its wonders to see, I pity them," 21-year-old surveyor George Dover wrote in 1912.
Inspiring the next generation
The exhibition has been in the works since 2022 and Dr Cook said it was one of the biggest and most rewarding of her career.
"I think Antarctica holds the most incredible fascination for Australians because it affects us all," she said,
"Antarctica is not only a living archive of our past, but it is a warning system for our future."
Professor Abram said she was thrilled the exhibition was helping to tell the stories of Australians who had dedicated their lives to research and conservation.
"With any luck, it will also inspire the next generation of scientists, explorers and adventurers to add their own chapter to Australia's Antarctic story,"she said.
The exhibition opens to the public at the National Museum of Australia on Wednesday, July 1.
Australia (LOCATION)
Antarctica (LOCATION)
Antarctic (ORG)
National Museum of Australia (ORG)
the National Antarctic Heritage Collection (ORG)
the National Museum of Australia (ORG)
Canberra (LOCATION)
Nerilie Abram (PERSON)
the Australian Antarctic Program (ORG)
Abram (PERSON)
Denman Glacier (LOCATION)
the Australian Antarctic Division (ORG)
Laura Cook (PERSON)
Sydney (LOCATION)
Holden (ORG)