
Title | : | Sable Island: The Strange Origins and Curious History of a Dune Adrift in the Atlantic |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0802777406 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780802777409 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 276 |
Publication | : | First published January 1, 2004 |
Awards | : | Evelyn Richardson Non-Fiction Award (2005) |
Marq de Villiers and Sheila Hirtle are coauthors of Sahara: The Extraordinary History of the World's Largest Desert and several other books on exploration, history, politics, and travel. Sable Island, published in Canada as A Dune Shift, won the twenty-eighth Evelyn Richardson Nonfiction Prize, the longest-running writing award in Canada. De Villiers and Hirtle live in Eagle Head, Nova Scotia.
"As delightful to experience in words as it is difficult to experience in actuality . . . inherently compelling."--"Chicago Sun-Times"
"As delightful to experience in words as it is difficult to experience in actuality . . . inherently compelling."--"Chicago Sun-Times"
"[A] sense of wonder . . . prevails from first page to last . . . A great book."--"Portland Press Herald" (Maine)
"The longtime Canadian collaborators outline the natural and chronological history of a 30-mile crescent of peach-colored sand that still eats an occasional ship for supper. Dotted with greenery and wild horses, orchids and Ipswich sparrows, Sable Island is considered one of the great graveyards of the North Atlantic. It sits out there in the ocean's steel-gray roil on the edge of the continental shelf. Who would ever suspect that there would be a shape-shifting island in this vastness, with submerged bars ready to trap and topple a ship? Very few, at least at first, explain the authors in their glinting profile. The island's distant past is as foggy as its summer weather; Basque sailors may have been there, maybe Vikings, perhaps an Irish monk in a coracle. De Villiers and Hirtle provide a sweet little geological history of the place, a child of glacial retreat, and detail the island's special location 'in the center of this vortex, this complex system of currents, gyres, and rings' that give it stability but also may spell its doom by pushing it into the abyssal gully to the east. For such a small scrap of sand, the island has a dogged human history, borne of the rivalry between the French and English. A humane establishment was founded there to aid shipwrecked sailors (brought to life with excerpts from letters, diaries, and news reports) as well as to dump a lunatic or misfit or two. Access is guarded these days to protect the fragile estate and its inhabitants--seals that serve as fodder for the elusive Greenland shark, birds, and feral ponies--but the island remains under threat from energy interests and from nature itself. Another finely etched portrait of a strange, romantic place from this accomplished duo."--"Kirkus Reviews"
"Sable Island is a low-lying, 30-mile-long sand dune on the edge of the North American continental shelf southeast of Nova Scotia. It lies right in the middle of a complex set of ocean currents, meteorological systems, and historical events. It is also the subject of this well-written, easy-to-read 'biography' by de Villiers and Hirtle. Basque fishermen and Vikings were probably the first to see the island, which was later inhabited by feral horses that have survived there for almost 250 years. The authors also examine the politics of trying to preserve this fragile ecosystem . . . readers wanting to delve more deeply into the various aspects of Sable will make good use of the extensive bibliography."--Margaret Rioux, "Library Journal"
"This engaging natural history celebrates one of the world's most precarious landscapes, a sand spit 30 miles long and less than a mile wide, plunked down 100 miles from the Canadian coast. Continually gouged by wind and wave and stingily replenished with sand by the currents swirling around it, the evanescent but intractable island has wrecked hundreds of ships over the centuries while sheltering enough greenery and fresh water to maintain a herd of wild horses. De Villiers and Hirtle explore the geological and oceanographic forces that shaped and maintain the island and the flora and fauna that cling to it. They also examine its place in human history, regaling readers with tales of the shipwreck tragedies that darken its past and recalling the many odd little communities of castaways, lifeguards and scientists that have washed up on its beaches. The island and its environs are now threatened by oil and gas drilling, rising sea levels and an ominous drift toward the continental shelf and the deep-sea abyss beyond. But while it lasts, a dynamic equilibrium fleetingly perched atop titanic forces of nature, the island is an apt metaphor for life itself."--"Publishers Weekly"
Sable Island: The Strange Origins and Curious History of a Dune Adrift in the Atlantic Reviews
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This book was more science than history, but I was expecting it to be the opposite. That was why I picked this up from the library. This book was mostly oceanography and meteorology. While I enjoy reading about science, this book was very dry and read like a textbook.
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I am from the east coast of North America and I had never heard of Sable Island until I read this book. I’m not sure how because it is pretty damn interesting.
Sable Island is a sandbar which is completely shaped by its location. Because it exists near the drop off of a continental shelf, it is constantly moving as sand is pulled from one side while the other side has sand deposited. It is also far north in the Atlantic and has frequent fog. It is just under 27 miles long but no more than ¾ of a mile wide. It also happens to be in the middle of a frequented shipping lane used for centuries.
What do you get when you add all that up? At least 350 shipwrecks in recorded history and probably more. Sable Island is one of the most dangerous things in the Atlantic Ocean. If you don’t know where it is then you may end up wreck on it.
The book covers way more than just geography and shipwrecks. It’s worth checking out. -
Authors Marq de Villiers and Sheila Hirtle have produced an interesting book on the history of the Canadian island known as Sable Island. One could be forgiven I believe for thinking the place uninteresting and unworthy of a nearly 250 page book, the island described by some as a "desolate and barren and storm-swept sandbank in the North Atlantic." A crescent shaped island, with arms at east and west reaching to the north, the center bulging towards the south, it is the last lonely outpost of land between Canada and Europe (or Bermuda). Located a hundred miles south of Nova Scotia, it is a mere thirty miles long and at its widest less than a mile wide. A treeless place, it is an island of dunes - some bald, most covered in vegetation - and small ponds. Not a particularly high island, on the north beach dunes reach 85 feet in height, but on the south beach they are rarely more than 8 feet high, considerably shorter than some of the waves that occur during the many gales and storms of the region (though waves that rarely reach the island directly - at least at that height - owing to numerous sand bars miles out to sea around the island). What fame the island has is generally not from it scenery; located on major shipping lands, in an area that is frequently prone to storms and fog, and often not very visible far out to sea, the island has been described as the deadliest piece of real estate in Canada, with hundreds of wrecks having taking place in its waters, fully ten wrecks for every mile of coastline. An additional dangerous feature of the island are its spits located out to the east and west (washed over too often for much in the way of vegetation) which extend between four and nine miles out, as well as the submerged east and west bars, which extend out to eighteen miles - though a massive storm can radically change the size of the spits and bars overnight.
The authors spent a great deal of time discussing the geology of the island, introducing many concepts of that science. Sable Island is an island of sand - not rocks, shale, slate, boulders, or really much in the way of soil - as indeed the name Sable is the French word for sand. Geologists have pegged the island's age at around 15,000 years and they believe the island represents a by-product of the glaciers that once covered Canada, that originally Sable Island was the terminal moraine of a glacier's advance (though much of that original sand has since been moved by wind and wave). The island has not been a static one, changing in size and shape numerous times over human history. Many believe that the island will eventually vanish, its sand vanishing into the depths of the Gully, a huge canyon cut in the continental shelf that almost touches the tip of the island's eastern bar, massive in size (largest submarine canyon in the western North Atlantic at 25 miles long, 10 miles wide, and 8,000 feet deep). There is a great deal of debate over whether the island is moving east, moving west, growing, or shrinking, a subject covered a length.
Meteorology and oceanography around the island are very well covered, with much discussion of global currents and wind systems. The island is very windy, with average winds at 16 miles an hour, gales of up 85 miles an hour routine, and winds of over 120 mph recorded during hurricane-strength storms. It is also wet - annual precipitation is 55 inches, mostly rain, monthly averaging between 3.6 and 5.7 inches - and foggy (July routinely boasts upwards of 20 foggy days and one June had 126 straight hours of fog).
Numerous animals call the island home. For decades the island was known for cattle that had been let loose on the island, though they were all harvested by the 1630s. More famous -and still present - are the ponies of Sable, owing their existence to the politics of the Expulsion (or in French the Grand Derangement or Great Upheaval) of the Acadians in the 1750s. The authors go into a great deal of detail on horse genealogy, firmly showing that the horses bear genetic (and historical) relationships to horses from Acadia. At various times rats, rabbits, cats, dogs, and foxes plagued the island though all have since been removed. Native animals include many species of insects (including three endemic moths and a beetle), a unique nematode, an endemic freshwater sponge which lives in the island's numerous ponds, the Ipswich Sparrow (a subspecies of the Savannah sparrow, breeds only on Sable), numerous nesting seabirds (mostly gulls, terns, and sandpipers), and seals (mostly gray and harbor). The walrus once occurred on the island but has been extinct since the mid 17th century though for many decades afterward their tusks were collected from the shifting sands.
Much of the book (I would say over half) dealt with the human history of the island. It was comprehensive, going all the way back to debates over whom first saw and may have landed on the island, whether they were Viking, Basque, or Portuguese. There was much confusion in early maps over where the island was, its exact shape and size, and indeed who owned it. At various times the island was called Fagunda Island, Santa Cruz, and Isola della Rena (rena being Italian for sand) before the name became Sable Island (or Isle de Sable) in 1601. Unfortunately, most of the human history of the island is associated with the numerous shipwrecks, many of them with few if any survivors and at times hundreds of lives were lost, leading eventually to life saving services and lighthouses being set up on the island. Much of this made for exciting reading, with many first person accounts quoted of shipwrecked sailors and those involved in life saving.
An interesting book, I would have liked some pictures though.
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We read this book out loud while travelling and found the information very interesting. There was too much detail, however, and we abandoned it at page 40. I have ordered some less detailed volumes.
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*3.5
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I found this while experimenting with the library snooks software, but it's pretty interesting so far. A nice mix of geology and history, and sufficiently well written to pull me along. I still prefer handheld books over electronic, tho.
Finished. I wish my brain could hold the information about tides and winds and sand drift. I'm always musing about these things when I beachcomb.
I'm not sure why the writer felt the need to write this book: it seems a pastiche of other accounts, although I'd have to read them to be sure. But I can understand the fascination with this island. It's situated at the edge of the Grand Banks, and the Gully (Grand Canyon of the Atlantic), hidden sandbars stretching out, iceberg-like, to trap the unwary ship. That puts it in the center of all sorts of human interests: in the early days it was cod-fishing, now it's oil-drilling. Adjunct to the commercial is the non-profit activity of life-saving and environmental/scientific activity. So, the story of this island is a microcosm of North-American history, with the added allure of shipwrecks, wild horses, and hermits. I'd love to visit this island, just as I'd like to live in a lighthouse or some other out-of-the way place. -
De Villiers, Marq. 2004. Sable Island: the strange origins and curious history of a dune adrift in the Atlantic. Walker & Company, New York. ISBN: 0-8027-1432-3. Hardback, (Ordered through ABE Books: around $5)
Sable Island decreases and increases its size as Atlantic storms toss sand on its beaches to and fro. Its surrounding sand bars and reefs make it a treacherous spot for fishing and other ocean going vessels. For that reason rescue, weather, and research stations have been on the island for several hundred years. Animals, particularly, horses have been established. Feral horses are the only animals that have maintained a sustainable population. Depressing, is the fact that Sable Island's beaches are littered with human created debris and garbage illustrating that there is no place on earth free of human environmental consequences.
The book is interesting, though not an easy read. -
Ok, so I just enjoy reading know-it-all books about largely unknown-about-at-all places.
That a spit of sand, a sort of global erratic, could inspire so much linkage to the past, to weather, to humanity. And, well, that it may not be there for all that much longer...what's not to like in a read that's nifty & thrifty with both its poindexter & lyrical touches. -
This was an interesting book, but it was sort of a collection of thematic essays rather than a coherent book. It's a Canadian island I knew very little about (although I got Buck 65's "Blood of a Young Wolf" playing in my head on repeat), so it was interesting, but I found it a little frustrating. I wanted some sort of way to tie all this disparate stuff together. Quick read, though.
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There must be thousands of stories of human drama and survival from that island from its many shipwrecks. This had hardly any of that. Definately not a history book of any quality, but good if you want a general science overview of the island.
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What a fascinating history this island has -- and although the natural history bits of this book are perhaps told a tad more coherently than the human history bits, this is still a very enjoyable read.
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I've always had a fascination with Sable Island, and this book certainly satisfied much of my curiosity. Not a novel...
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Lots of good, interesting information, unfortunately, presented in a dry, uninteresting way.
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A pretty cool book but not something that I would read again.
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Photos would have made a better book
Kept waiting to see early and historic photos with recent updates but not to be had
Overall to scientific for many readers