The Island That Humans Can’t Conquer



ORIGINAL POST
Posted by Ed 3 yrs ago
https://hongkong.asiaxpat.com/Utility/GetImage.ashx?ImageID=dde1249e-d519-4f69-87c5-47514c9ad5c9&refreshStamp=0
A faraway island in Alaska has had its share of visitors, but none can remain for long on its shores.
 

St. Matthew Island is said to be the most remote place in Alaska. Marooned in the Bering Sea halfway to Siberia, it is well over 300 kilometers and a 24-hour ship ride from the nearest human settlements. It looks fittingly forbidding, the way it emerges from its drape of fog like the dark spread of a wing.

Curved, treeless mountains crowd its sliver of land, plunging in sudden cliffs where they meet the surf. To St. Matthew’s north lies the smaller, more precipitous island of Hall. A castle of stone called Pinnacle stands guard off St. Matthew’s southern flank. To set foot on this scatter of land surrounded by endless ocean is to feel yourself swallowed by the nowhere at the center of a drowned compass rose.
 

My head swims a little as I peer into a shallow pit on St. Matthew’s northwestern tip. It’s late July in 2019, and the air buzzes with the chitters of the island’s endemic singing voles.

Wildflowers and cotton grass constellate the tundra that has grown over the depression at my feet, but around 400 years ago, it was a house, dug partway into the earth to keep out the elements.
 
It’s the oldest human sign on the island, the only prehistoric house ever found here. A lichen-crusted whale jawbone points downhill toward the sea, the rose’s due-north needle.
 
https://www.hakaimagazine.com/features/the-island-humans-cant-conquer/

Please support our advertisers:

< Back to main category



Login now
Ad