Funk Island The name Funk, which means evil odour or vapour, is thought to have been given to the island because of the foul odour which predominates there. The smell arises from the
nitrate and
phosphate concentrations found in the
guano deposited by the many millions of birds which have nested there over the centuries. However, an alternative theory suggests that the name may be traced to a
Norse or
Icelandic word for a
haycock which the island resembles.
Gaspar Corte-Real visited Newfoundland in 1501, and shortly after that date Funk Island appears on two maps by
Pedro Reinel as
Y Dos Saues (1504) and
Ylhas das aves (1520), both of which refer to an island of birds. A 1626 map by
Pierre Mortier labels the place
I des Penguins, while an
Italian map dated 1661 has the island marked as
I Penguin Abonda di Vecelli (Penguin Island abounding with birds). One of the earliest British maps by
cartographer Herman Moll, dated 1716, refers to it as Penguin Island. The name Funk Island appears on
James Cook's 1775 map as it does in the charts and surveys compiled in 1765. According to the book Pioneers in Canada (Blackie and Sons 1912) Jacques Cartier in 1534 commented on the great number of birds and the presence of a
polar bear on Funk Island. Funk Island was probably called Penguin Island because the
great auk used to nest on this island by thousands, and possibly tens of thousands, up to the late 18th century when its numbers declined drastically. However, the
American Heritage Dictionary suggests the word "penguin", which may be derived from the
Breton language penn gwenn meaning "white head", originated with the name of the island and subsequently become a synonym for "great auk". Bretons were settled in the near area of 'Terra de Bretones', mentioned on Verrazzano's map with their Ermins coat-of-arms. ==Demise of the great auk==