Article 71938 Beasts of the Sea by Iida Turpeinen review – a hypnotic tale of the sea cow’s extinction

Beasts of the Sea by Iida Turpeinen review – a hypnotic tale of the sea cow’s extinction

by
Jessie Greengrass
from Science | The Guardian on (#71938)

This hit debut from Finland is intensely readable, but could have delved more deeply into the links between human progress and environmental destruction

In November 1741 Georg Wilhelm Steller, theologian, naturalist, and curious man", was shipwrecked on an island between Alaska and Russia. There he found, floating in the shallow waters, a vast sirenian, Hydrodamalis gigas, nine feet long and soon to be known as Steller's sea cow. Having made it through the winter, largely byeating the sea cows, the following August Steller and the remaining survivors of the Great Northern Expedition left the island. Within 30years, Steller's sea cow was huntedto extinction.

Having described these events, Finnish author Iida Turpeinen's debut novel goes on to describe the lives of other historical figures, each of whom are touched in some way by the sea cow, now reduced to bones. There is Hampus Furuhjelm, governor of Alaska, in search of a complete skeleton, and his sister Constance, who finds peace and intellectual autonomy among her taxidermy collection. Later, there's Hilda Olson, a scientific illustrator, andJohn Gronvall, specialist in the reconstruction of birds' eggs, who is tasked with preparing a sea cow's relicsfor exhibition.

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