Galapagos Islands, 2024
The Galapagos islands are about 550 miles west of the mainland of Ecuador, hugging the southern side of the equator. The European discovery of the islands was in 1535, by a Spanish bishop on the way to Peru who drifted there when caught in The Doldrums. I’m not sure why the bishop gets credit for the “discovery” since there would have been officers and crew of the ship, and maybe other passengers, but I suspect it has something to do with who can write things down.
They were included on maps by the late 1500s.
The first known human “settlement” in the Galapagos was a marooned sailor in 1807. All the years in between, the uninhabited islands were a safe haven for pirates, and used as whaling stations, where the giant tortoises were almost wiped out, hunted for their fat and meat.
When I saw this photograph, before I made it, I thought about a 17th or 18th century sailor who might have been weeks seeing only sea and sky, merging into an endless horizon. And what kind of joy might he have felt seeing a shore bird floating high in the sky, and then a tiny dark pimple of land breaking the seam of that infinite line, standing in its own spotlight?
For more of Bill’s photographs, go to https://www.billdurrence.com/index.
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