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JAPANESE EXPLORER FINDS EVIDENCE OF
'ROBINSON CRUSOE'S' ISLAND HOME
TOKYO (Sept. 15,
2005)--On a remote, wooded island 470 miles off the coast of Chile, Japanese
explorer Daisuke Takahashi believes he has found the location of the hut where
Scottish privateer Alexander Selkirk, who likely inspired the Daniel Defoe
classic "Robinson Crusoe," lived during the four years and four months he was
marooned on the island 300 years ago.
Intrigued by the question of how a
lone man could adapt to survive in such an unfamiliar environment, Takahashi
wanted to find where and how Selkirk lived while stranded on the South Pacific
island now known as Robinson Crusoe from 1704 to 1709. Aided by an islander's
recollection of a dwelling high up on an abandoned trail, Takahashi and his
international team, funded by the National Geographic Society's Expeditions
Council, began excavations. The most telling evidence that Takahashi found to
link Selkirk to the site was a small blue tip from copper navigational dividers,
a tool commonly used by sailors of the period and almost certainly belonging to
Selkirk.
The story of Takahashi's discovery is chronicled in the October
2005 issue of National Geographic magazine, which is published in 27
local-language editions, including Spanish and Japanese.
Takahashi, 38,
graduated with a bachelor's degree in political science from Tokyo's Meiji
University in 1990 and worked in advertising for over a decade while also
pursuing his love for exploration. A professional author and explorer since
2003, he has taken part in numerous expeditions around the world, including to
the Sahara Desert, Amazon rain forest, Galápagos Islands, Antarctica, Yemen,
Oman, Israel, Russia's Sakhalin Island, Australia, Micronesia and Tahiti.
Takahashi is a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society in London and
The Explorers Club in New York. He is the author of the book "In Search of
Robinson Crusoe."
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