The
Nivkh people populated the Shantar islands until the 1730s. The first recorded exploration of the Shantar Islands was in April 1640, when Russian explorer
Ivan Moskvitin allegedly sailed to the mouth of the
Amur River with a group of
Cossacks and spotted the Shantar Islands on the way back. Moskvitin reported his discoveries to Prince Shcherbatov, the Muscovite
voivode in
Tomsk. Based on Ivan Moskvitin's account, the first Russian map of the Far East was drawn in March 1642. The Shantar Islands were also explored by Russian surveyors between 1711 and 1725.
American whaleships cruised for
bowhead whales around the Shantar Islands between 1852 and 1907. They anchored among the islands to send
whaleboats into the bays to the south and west, including
Uda,
Tugur, and
Ulban Bays. They sought shelter under Bolshoy Shantar, Medvezhy, Malyy Shantar, and Feklistova Islands from strong winds and gales as well as to obtain wood and water. At least four ships were wrecked on the islands: one on the
Pinnacle Rocks, one on Medvezhy and two on Bolshoy Shantar during
gales in October 1858 and August 1907. At the end of 2013, the
Shantar Islands National Park was created by Russian scientists and conservationists with support from WWF and several international organizations to protect the wildlife of the islands. ==Ecology==