The last Great Auks, the Dodos of the North Atlantic, were probably caught and killed in 1844 on a rock called Eldey off the south-west coast of Iceland, by Icelanders who rowed out in 2 open boats, each with ten oarsmen rowing and four resting at any one time, a journey of about 12 hours each way through a notoriously dangerous tide race.
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The last Great Auks
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The last Great Auks, the Dodos of the North Atlantic, were probably caught and killed in 1844 on a rock called Eldey off the south-west coast of Iceland, by Icelanders who rowed out in 2 open boats, each with ten oarsmen rowing and four resting at any one time, a journey of about 12 hours each way through a notoriously dangerous tide race.