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THE LAST OF ITS KIND by Gísli Pálsson

THE LAST OF ITS KIND

The Search for the Great Auk and the Discovery of Extinction

by Gísli Pálsson

Pub Date: Feb. 6th, 2024
ISBN: 9780691230986
Publisher: Princeton Univ.

An examination of the extinction of an iconic bird during the 19th century.

Pálsson, emeritus professor of anthropology at the University of Iceland and author of The Man Who Stole Himself, examines the human-caused extinction of the great auk. The author focuses largely on the 1858 expedition of ornithologists John Wolley and Alfred Newton, who traveled from Britain to Iceland with the goal of gathering specimens of the great auk, which was “reported to be in serious decline.” As Pálsson notes, during the Victorian age, egg collecting was a popular hobby, and “obsessed collectors and scientists abroad” sought to fill their “cabinets of curiosities.” At the time, no name existed for the loss of a species, as most people believed that “existing organisms could not vanish, and that new species could not appear.” During the course of their expedition, Wolley kept detailed notebooks, known as the Gare-Fowl Books, which include interviews with locals and provide a real-time account of the extinction of the great auk. According to interviews and records, the “last successful trip” related to the great auk had been the infamous 1844 hunt. When Newton returned from the 1858 expedition, he concluded, “As to the extinction of the Great Auk, if it is extinct, I think it has been mainly accomplished by human means.” Pálsson demonstrates that Newton’s greatest achievement was establishing a clear distinction between unavoidable natural extinction, as theorized by Darwin, and “avertible extinction due to human agency,” which paved the way for animal protection measures. For his contributions, Pálsson contends that Newton deserves a place alongside other pioneering environmentalists. Despite its disturbing revelations, this well-written and researched narrative will appeal to scholars and armchair naturalists alike.

Both haunting and disheartening, this is an accessible look at a signal species in the history of human-caused extinctions.