 This is a room for treasures. It is a specially alarmed vault and it also has its own temperature and humidity control which is monitored 24-7. I'm responsible for the specially protected areas where we keep the intrinsically valuable documents. The Polar Collection is the donated records of Polar North and South explorers. They're just very personal. They're very different from the government records. We're looking at an acrylic oil painting done by Dayton Brown. He was in the U.S. Navy in the 1940s. He was stationed up in the Arctic Circle in the Arctic Ocean and his claim to fame is that he developed a color gray that could be used on the submarines that cannot be seen under the Arctic Ocean. He donated his collection of oil paintings. The paintings have never been exhibited that we know of. They've never been published. This is the only one that features people and it's just titled Mother, Daughter, and Child. This is indigenous people that were up in the Arctic when Dayton Brown was up there. You would never expect to find anything on the Abominable Snowman and official government documents and not only do you find it here but they're being totally serious about it. This is a State Department dispatch from November 30th, 1959 and it gives regulations governing mountain climbing expeditions in Nepal related to the Yeti, otherwise known as the Abominable Snowman. What did it look like? What did you see? Cousin coming. I see. I see. What man must not see. I see through the Yeti. In case the Yeti is traced, it can be photographed or caught alive but it must not be killed or shot at except in an emergency arising out of self-defense. Robert Peary, of course, was the Arctic explorer. Robert Peary papers came to us in the early 60s. This letter is my favorite, written to his mom on December 28th, 1884 and the return address is the steamer colon and he's in the Caribbean Sea. Birthplace of the New World, land which first gladdened the eyes of Columbus, the man whose name can be equaled only by him who shall one day stand with 360 degrees of longitude beneath his motionless foot and for whom east and west shall have vanished, the discoverer of the North Pole. Here it was in 1884 and he's dreaming of going to the North Pole and he didn't go until 1909. All photographs taken of the animal, the creature itself, if captured alive or dead, must be surrendered to the government of Nepal at the earliest time. In keeping with the theme of cool things, we're looking at the January 24, 1922 patent for Christian K. Nelson for the original Eskimo Pi. Only it wasn't originally called the Eskimo Pi, it was called the Ice Cream, the letter I-S-C-R-E-A-M Ice Cream and it was later renamed the Eskimo Pi. News and reports showing light on the actual existence of the creature must be submitted to the government of Nepal as soon as they are available and must not in any way be given out to the press or reporters for publicity without the permission of the government of Nepal. This is in the Paul Seipel collection. He was 18 years old when there was a competition amongst the Boy Scouts of America and he wrote the best essay and was selected to go to the Antarctic with Bird. And he continued the rest of his life doing some type of Antarctic or exploring of some sort. These are carvings of penguins that Paul Seipel carved out of the chewy bones that were taken up there for the Huskies, the sled dogs to chew on. They list expeditions and one of them is a U.S. expedition that is going to go search for the Yeti in the spring and autumn of 1958. There's nothing here unfortunately about finding the Yeti. When you open a box you're just surprised by what you find.