Naturally Kiawah Magazine Volume 40 | Page 50

Mark Catesby’s Exploration of South Carolina’s Coastal Waterways I By Sylvia W. Bacon  magine seeing paintings of waterfowl and plants Top: Green Heron “Green Bittern” (Butorides virescens) Perched on Carolina ash, Vol. I. Plate 80. Left: His Little Blue Heron (Egretta caerulea) has a similar background. Vol I. Plate 76. Bottom: Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) and Gray Mullet (Mugil cephalus). Vol I. Plate 1. 48 of subjects on Kiawah Island and the surrounding areas created 300 years ago and realizing these images look much like the flora and fauna we see here today. It is even more interesting to learn that these works were by an English gentleman named Mark Catesby, who explored the South Carolina coastline from Sullivan’s Island to Edisto in the early 1720s. According to written documentation, Mark Catesby was the first person to document dolphin strand feeding along the South Carolina coastline. Unfortunately, he did not make sketches of this activity, but he wrote about seeing dolphins pursuing fish, eating them as they jumped out of the water while voracious birds grabbed the fish from the air. His account is recorded in The Natural History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands, Volume I, page vii. Mark Catesby was an artist and naturalist who first came to North America in 1722 at the age of 40. He loved what he saw here and felt driven to explore this wildness, sketching and making notes as he traveled. During his two trips to North America, he scouted much of the area from Virginia to the Bahamas. Some years after his first visit, Catesby made engravings from his sketches and published The Natural History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands, Volumes I and II (1729–1732). According to The Virginia Museum of History and Culture, “This monumental two-volume set is considered to be one of the most important achievements of eighteenth- century natural science. Although he was not a trained artist, Catesby’s drawings and descriptions, especially of birds, were so detailed and vibrant that today he is known as “the founder of American ornithology.” His reputation has grown in recent years, and today his engravings are highly prized by collectors. Catesby spent over 20 years on The Natural History project working on it until his death in 1749. He was considered a pioneer in the field of scientific illustration.” Many well known men of the time respected Catesby’s work and often relied on his findings. Records show that Lewis and Clark consulted him before making their exploration toward the Pacific. He also influenced renowned Naturally Kiawah