The Last of Its Kind. The Search for the Great Auk and the Discovery of Extinction
Author
Pálsson, G. [translated by Anna Yates]
Year
2024
Info
Princeton & Oxford. Princeton University Press. 291 pp., 8 plates with 16 color & b/w photos and color illustrations, 37 b/w photos and b/w illustrations, hardback gr. 8 [14.7 x 22.5 cm] [with dust jacket]
The great auk is one of the most tragic and documented examples of extinction. A flightless bird that bred primarily on the remote islands of the North Atlantic, the last of its kind were killed in Iceland in 1844. Gisli Palsson draws on firsthand accounts from the Icelanders who hunted the last great auks to bring to life a bygone age of Victorian scientific exploration while offering vital insights into the extinction of species. Palsson vividly recounts how British ornithologists John Wolley and Alfred Newton set out for Iceland to collect specimens only to discover that the great auks were already gone. At the time, the Victorian world viewed extinction as an impossibility or trivialized it as a natural phenomenon. Palsson chronicles how Wolley and Newton documented the fate of the last birds through interviews with the men who killed them, and how the naturalists' Icelandic journey opened their eyes to the disappearance of species as a subject of scientific concern-and as something that could be caused by humans. Blending a richly evocative narrative with rare, unpublished material as well as insights from ornithology, anthropology, and Palsson's own North Atlantic travels, The Last of Its Kind reveals how the saga of the great auk opens a window onto the human causes of mass extinction. Originally published in 2020 in Icelandic as Fuglinn Sem Gat Ekki Flogi? by Mál og Menning, and here heavily expanded and updated on.