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Become part of the history that has
marveled men throughout hundreds of
years. Explore the Galapagos Islands and experience the wonders
of nature
in their natural habitat on board the Galapagos
Explorer II.
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from
Pre-history to The Present ... |
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1978
NATURAL HERITAGE SITE
On September 8, 1978,
UNESCO declared the Galapagos a Natural Heritage
Site for its scientific prestige and to support
the conservation efforts of the National Park.
The General Secretary visited the islands in
1984 to proclaim it himself. |
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1998
INTERPRETATION CENTER
On August 12, 1998,
Prince Felipe of Spain arrived aboard the Galapagos
Explorer II to inaugurate the Interpretation
Center on San Cristobal Island.
March 18: Special law for Galapagos
islands is created.
- Creation of the Galapagos Marine Reserve |
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1999
ANNIVERSARY GALAPAGOS PARK SERVICE

July 4: 40th Anniversary
of the Galapagos National Park Service, government
organization in charge of controlling and
managing the protected areas of Galapagos
( islands and marine reserve ).
March 18: The Master Management
Plan of the Galapagos Marine Reserve is approved. |
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2000
TORTOISE HAVE BEEN SENT BACK TO ESPAÑOLA
ISLAND
March 25: Thanks to the successful
breeding program in captivity that the
Galapagos National Park Service and the Charles
Darwin Research Station
carry, one thousand land tortoises have been
sent back to Española island. |
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2001
December 2: The Galapagos Marine Reserve is declared Human
kind Natural Heritage Site by the UNESCO.
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2002
THE RAMSAR CONVENTION
September 17: The wet lands
of the southern side of Isabela island were
declared international important places by the
RAMSAR Convention. |
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2003
25TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE GALAPAGOS ISLANDS
September 8: 25th Anniversary
of the Galapagos islands being Human kind Natural
Heritage Site. |
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PREHISTORY
Ancient archeological
remains have been found which indicated that
the historical inhabitants of the Ecuadorian
coast arrived on "Balsas" or a floating
crafts and a sailing technique, which allowed
them to go far out to sea. There are no traces
of permanent settlements because they were probably
accidental trips and lost at sea; therefore,
it was very difficult for them to return. |
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1535
DISCOVERY
The islands were discovered
by Tomas de Berlanga, they found two islands
and they saw three more, one of them, the largest,
was Isabela. They named them Galapagos because
of the similarity of the tortoise’s shell on
a Spanish saddle. The lack of water and abundance
of rocks caused a negative impression at first. |
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1561
FIRST MAP OF THE ISLAND
The islands soon appeared
on maps. The first was a map from 1561, soon
they appeared on the Dutch maps like Mercator
(1569) and Ortelius (1570). The name the "Enchanted
Islands" appeared on a map by Ortelius of 1589.
Guerrit’s map of 1622 shows three islands identified
as Isabela, Santa Cruz, and San Cristobal. |
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1680
PIRATES AND BUCCNEERS IN THE 17th CENTURY
The islands continued
to be forgotten for more than a century until
the English pirates realized they were an ideal
base for attacking, (the Spanish trade ships)
hiding out, repairing their boats, stocking
up on water and tortoise meat for later journeys.
The first expedition was that of John Cook and
Richard Hawkins (1680). The second expedition
in 1684 (Cook and E. Davis) was more intense
and prolonged. They traveled the surrounding
seas until 1688. The third was by Rogers and
Countney who stayed from 1707 until 1711. With
these expeditions began the exploitation of
the tortoises. |
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1684
COWLEY AND THE FIRST ENGLISH NAMES
In the expedition of
John Cook in 1684, a long traveled William Dampier,
who has left us a long legacy, and Ambrose Cowley
made the first comprehensive map of the islands
and gave them the English names, which last
until today. Dedicating them to several sponsors
or friends: The island of King Charles, Crossman,
Brattle, Antony Dean, and the Duke of York,
Norfolk, Albemarle, and Narborough. The map
shows for the first time the approximate position
of the islands, although some of them are difficult
to identify, lake "Charles Island" which could
be one of the islands currently known as Floreana,
Española, or San Cristobal. |
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1744
SPANISH EXPLORATION OF THE ISLANDS
Although they didn’t
give much importance to the Galapagos in the
first centuries, they explored them and gave
some names, known as "the ancient Spanish names",
but without clearly identifying them. Therefore
"Isla de la Salud" or "Santa Maria" was probably
the island currently known as Floreana; "San
Bernabe" the currently Isla Santiago; "Mascarin"
was probably Española; "La Isla de Tabaco",
San Cristobal. Later the "Isla Santa Isabela"
would be identified as Isabela. The "Islas Santa
Maria" (Tortuga, Crossman), appear in several
French maps. In 1744, the Geographic Source
made a clearer map with several Spanish names
that haven’t been conserved. |
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1788-1860
WHALERS IN GALAPAGOS: COLNETT
Several English whalers
discovered that the whales migrated to the Galapagos
to breed. In 1788, the ship Emilia arrived to
England with 140 tons of oil and 888 sea lion
skins. Soon after, the Beaver of Nantucket (USA)
returned with 1,300 tons of whale oil. It was
the beginning of a virtual stampede. In 1793,
Captain James Colnett arrived in the H.M.S.
Rattler to study the possibilities of establishing
a whaling station in the South Pacific. By the
end of the century, no less than 40 whalers,
English and American frequented the water of
Galapagos during the time of the whales to stock
up on water, tortoises and sea lion skins. It
will never be known how many thousands of tortoise
were sacrificed and taken from the islands. |
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19th
CENTURY THE FIRST INHIBITIANT: PATRICK WATKINS
In the beginning of
the 19th century, an Irish sailor was abandoned
on Charles Island (Floreana), his name was Patrick
Watkins and he is considered the first inhabitant
of the islands. He cultivated vegetables, which
he traded to the whalers for rum to get drunk.
Several years later, he managed to take some
boats and some men whom he treated like slaves.
With them, he took to sea but he arrived in
Guayaquil alone. He then went to Patia where
he convinced a mulatto woman to accompany him
back to the island. He was arrested when trying
to steal a ship and he spent the rest of his
days. |
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1832.
ECUADOR CLAIMS RIGHTS TO GALAPAGOS
Although the islands
belonged to Quito during the colonial years,
after the independence they couldn’t be considered
anybody’s land. For this reason the General
Jose Villamil, born in Louisiana and residing
in Guayaquil, suggested officially incorporating
the Archipielago into the new Republic. The
Colonel Ignacio Hernandez, delegate of the governor,
performed the ceremony February 12, 1832 on
the island of Floreana, which took this name
in honor of the first president of Ecuador,
Juan Jose Flores. |
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1832-1837
THE FIRST COLONIZATION
General Jose Villamil
organized a colonizing company with the illusion
of converting the archipelago into a place of
peace (the first town was called "The asylum
of peace"), of progress and of the regeneration
of criminals and rebel soldiers, by means of
work. Villamil moved to the island on October
12, 1832 to try make his dreams come true. In
the beginning, everything seemed to prosper
but the presence of criminals destroyed the
environment and ended up destroying the colony.
In 1836, Villamil released domesticated animals
(cows, horses, and donkeys) on the main islands.
To take advantage of the grass and they reproduced
very quickly, together with the wild animals
that were left over from the previous colonization
(dogs, cats, pigs, and goats) they turned into
a danger for the ecology of the islands. |
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1835
CHARLES DARWIN IN GALAPAGOS
On September 15, 1835,
Captain Robert Fitz Roy arrive to the Galapagos
on the "Beagle" as part of a trip around the
world with the young naturalist Charles Darwin.
They first visited Chatham Island (San Cristobal),
and later Charles Island (Floreana). They sailed
between Narborough and disembarked on Santiago.
While the officials on board the Beagle drew
a map of the islands, Charles Darwin studied
and collected samples of the flora and fauna.
His observation of the diversity of species
on the islands would be the basis for the later
elaboration of the Theory of Evolution. The
Galapagos would be seen from under a different
light, a virtual laboratory of evolution. |
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1850-1860
THE PRISON
After Villamil left
the island, the Galapagos was considered an
ideal site for a prison, as its distance from
the mainland made escape nearly impossible and
the inmates would have sufficient food and water
to survive. Sometimes the prisoners were without
supplies, which prompted the delinquents to
commit other crimes. A prisoner named Briones,
who captured whaling boat, escaped with other
prisoners to the mainland, and killed 28 men
in the entrance to the Gulf of Guayaquil, committed
the most famous crime. This incident provoked
a strong controversy, because the owners of
the whaling ship demanded large payments as
compensation and the Government of the United
States and threatened to send war ships if they
didn’t pay. |
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1869-1878
SECOND COLONIZATION
1860, a whaler discovered
the orchilla lichen, a valuable plant for dyeing.
Several businessmen tried to exploit it, among
them Mr. Jose Valdizan, a Spanish businessman
residing in Guayaquil. He obtained exclusive
rights in 1869 and moved to the islands of Floreana
where he organized plantations once the business
of the orchilla crashed. He believed, against
the opinion of everyone that he could take delinquents
to work on his properties and win them over
with kindness and work. He was treacherously
murdered July 23, 1878. The island was abandoned,
the domesticated animals and cattle went wild
and the workers didn’t want to return because
they considered it a "cursed island". |
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1879-1904
J. COBO’S EMPIRE
Starting in 1879, on
the island of San Cristobal, Manuel J. Cobos
formed an advanced agricultural center, called
"El Progreso", not far from the port. The first
products included leather from the feral cattle,
oil from tortoises and fishing, while sugar
cane plantations were prepared for a factory,
which was installed in 1891. Various ships maintained
an active trade with Guayaquil. Unfortunately,
"El Progreso" turned into a concentration camp
with forced labor and where the will of Cobos
was the only law. He imposed his own circulation,
made decisions regarding the life, death or
exile to isolated islands of many of his workers.
Camilo Casanova was exiled to the Island of
Santa Cruz, becoming an exact replica of Robison
Crusoe. M.J. Cobos was assassinated by a group
of his workers on January 15, 1904. |
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1850-1940
GALAPAGOS’ STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE
The strategic location
of the islands became very important as the
time drew near for the opening of the Panama
Canal. Various European and North American powers
looked for any way to buy or rent some or all
the islands, to be used as a fueling station
for Navy ships, or more importantly, for the
defense of the Canal on the Pacific side. They
even tried to declare the islands "res nullius"
(no man’s lands). Ecuador resisted this pressure,
but ceded some of the islands to be used for
defense during World War II. |
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1926-1929:
THE NORWEGIANS
The Norwegians had shown
an interest in the Galapagos since 1880 owing
to the abundance of fish and opportunities to
hunt whales. In 1908, a Norwegian sailboat crashed
on the West Side of the archipelago and part
of the crew was abandoned on the island of Santa
Cruz for many months. Upon their return to Norway,
they convinced many of their countrymen to immigrate
to the islands. Many groups arrived during 1926
and two colonies were formed on Floreana and
Santa Cruz. Unfortunately, the conditions weren’t
as they had expected and in less than two years,
the majority of the immigrants had returned
to Norway. Captain Bruun of the Norwegian marines
made a final attempt to colonize the islands,
but he died tragically on Isabela in July of
1931. |
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1929-1934:
THE GERMANS IN FLOREANA
In August 1929, Doctor
Friedrich Ritter and Dore Stranch arrive to
the island of Floreana, two lovers anxious to
live under their own philosophy, isolated from
their decadent civilization. Their writings
attracted others with similar ideas, but none
of them lasted long except for the Wittmer family
(Heinz, Marget, and Harris) from Cologne. A
few months later, an Austrian woman arrived,
who introduced herself as the Baroness together
with three lovers, and the island was transformed
into a small hell, due to intrigues of the new
inhabitants. The first lover returned to the
mainland after a few weeks.

In March 1934, the Baroness disappeared with
one of her lovers, Phillipson, and even though
Margret affirms that they went on a yacht to
the Pacific Island, no one has given any credit
to her story. Margret convinced Lorenz, the
surviving lover, to return to Germany. He disappeared
along with another Danish man, Nuggerud, before
arriving to the island of San Cristobal. A few
months later, Dr. Ritter was poisoned (on purpose
or by accident?) by Dore, and died. In December,
the mummified bodies of Lorenz and Nuggerud
were found on the island of Marchena. Out of
the seven colonists four died mysteriously,
this mystery has never been solved. However,
the Wittmer family still lives on the island. |
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1936
THE FIRST AIRPLANES
William Robinson lived on his yacht in Tagus
Cove, studying the flora and fauna of the islands,
when he suffered a serious attack of appendicitis
and his situation quickly became desperate.
Luckily, the tuna clipper the "Santa Cruz" was
nearby and contacted the Marines based in the
Panama Canal by radio. Once permission was granted,
two hydroplanes took off for the islands, followed
by the destroyer "Hale". They arrived on time
to save his life, and flights to the islands
were installed. The first airplane flight, which
carried mail from the Canal Zone to the Galapagos,
took place on February 6, 1936. A commemorative
stamp was created. The first commercial flights
arrived on January 3, 1959, with the LIA airlines
and later with TAME Ecuador’s airline (June
6, 1963), and once again, booklets of commemorative
stamps were created. TAME still has flights
to the Galapagos.
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1942-1949
BALTRA: STRATEGIC BASE FOR THE DEFENSE OF
THE PANAMA CANAL
The United States
considered the Galapagos essential to the
vigilance of the Canal. Since 1928, the US
having studied all of the alternatives in
case of a war in the Pacific, chose the island
of Baltra as the principal base, and accumulated
everything necessary in the Canal Zone ("the
Galapagos Units").
Five
days after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
March of 1942, operations at the base began:
the U.S. built 3 airstrips (the first airplane,
a B24 landed in May) the marines had their
center in the adjacent "Eolian Cove" and constructed
a dock (which is still being used), hydroplane
ramps, etc. In total, the Beta Base, as it
was called, could house six thousand men.
Even though the Beta Base never had to face
an emergency, the Union recognized that the
Galapagos had played an important role, and
for that reason they tried to buy or retain
the base after the war. The official turnover
took place in 1946, but the last contingents
didn’t leave until the beginning of 1949. |
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1946-1959
PENAL COLONY
The Wall of Tears
Once again, Ecuador made the error of opening
a penal colony on the Galapagos Islands. In
1946, it was used as military installations
on an alternative base, which operated during
the war. Unfortunately, the situation grew worse
and the colony turned into a concentration camp
until 1950, when a police chief forced the people
of the penal colony to construct a wall. This
wall is known as "the wall of tears". In February
1958, there was an uprising, an intelligent
prisoner named "Patecuco", disarmed police and
took "Valinda" the yacht that belonging to an
American millionaire and used it to escape to
the mainland. No deaths occurred during the
uprising, but the incident caused international
repercussions and the government shut down the
penal colony and stopped sending prisoners to
the islands. |
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1936-1959
FIRST PRESERVATION ATTEMPTS
Ecological preservation
attempts
Various scientific expeditions at the beginning
of this century sounded the alarm of the killing
of the giant tortoise and of the danger of their
disappearance. The events of the incorporation
of the islands to Ecuador (1932) and of the
visit of Charles Darwin (1935) were the occasions
when the Ecuadorian government took measures for the conservation of the animals. In 1936,
the islands were declared a National Reserve
with stricter regulations. Finally, in 1954,
a movement was started to protect the species
of the Galapagos and to found a center for scientific
investigations on the islands.
The Ecuadorian government declared the Galapagos
Islands a National Park on July 4, 1959. |
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1968
NATIONAL PARK
In 1968, the National
Park Service for the Galapagos was initiated.
It started as a part of the Forest
Service of
the Ministry of Agriculture.
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