It was puzzling to find, half a mile inland and over 100 ft above sea level, the bones of several bowhead whales. Not just the ribs or smaller flipper bones - the massive vertebrae and skulls, including this 20 ft long lower jawbone. Half-embedded in turf, encrusted with lichens, mosses and saxifrage, these bones have been there a long time. How long? We do not know. How did they get there? The wind did not blow them and nobody carried them. They may be sub-fossil bones, of bowheads that died naturally and dropped to the seabed. More probably they are the last remnants of whales killed during 19th century whaling and washed ashore on a strand. Either way, they showed us how very quickly Svalbard is rising as more and more of its icecap disappears.
Just 200 yards away six fat caribou grazed peacefully - the short, stocky Peary caribou of northern Greenland and Svalbard. They glanced at us, twitched their ears and kept right on grazing. With winter just around the corner and hard times ahead, they need to feed as hard as they can before the snow comes.