Authors: Susan Casey
Last man diving: Ron Elliott, the only commercial diver with nerve enough to pick urchins at the islands, on the deck of his boat
GW
, just south of Shark Alley.
SUSAN CASEY
A shark attack at the Farallones is not usually a subtle event; a pole camera is used to capture an underwater shot.
PETER PYLE
Aerial view, looking west, of the South Farallones. This photograph was taken in 1949.
LIBRARY
,
CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
“Wicked scary”: an aerial view of the North Farallones, circa 1952.
LIBRARY
,
CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
Eggers unloading their plunder at North Landing, with Arch Rock and Sugarloaf in the background. In 1905, a storm ripped the derrick from its platform and it was never replaced.
LIBRARY
,
CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
1896 egger, wearing his specially designed “egg shirt,” designed to hold eighteen-dozen murre eggs as he scaled the Farallon cliffs.
BOLTON COLLECTION
,
LIBRARY
,
CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
A northerly view of Southeast Farallon’s marine terrace, houses, and Lighthouse Hill, taken from Mirounga Bay.
PETER PYLE
An act of devotion: Scot Anderson on Sharkwatch, which he created in 1987. Every daylight hour during shark season, an observer stands at the lighthouse scanning the islands for signs of shark activity.
SUSAN CASEY
An eighteen-foot shark investigates a six-foot surfboard.
PETER PYLE
The fate of a surfboard at the Farallones.
PETER PYLE
Scot Anderson (in orange) observes a feeding. Also in the boat are director Paul Atkins and cinematographer Peter Scoones of the BBC film crew that visited the Farallones in 1993 to film
The Great White Shark
.
PETER PYLE
Whiteslash, an eighteen-foot female Peter described as “gentle and maternal,” cruises the whaler.
PETER PYLE