on Southampton Island. Snow-enhanced paleo-
strand lines from the last 10,000 years, during the spring thaw, 2011|upright=0.9 Historically speaking, Southampton Island is famous for its now-extinct inhabitants, the
Sadlermiut (modern
Inuktitut Sallirmiut "Inhabitants of
Salliq"). The
Tuniit, a pre-
Inuit culture, officially went ethnically and culturally extinct in 1902-03 when
infectious disease killed all of the
Sallirmiut in a matter of weeks. The island's first recorded visit by Europeans was in 1613 by
Welsh explorer
Thomas Button. At the beginning of the 20th century, the island was repopulated by
Aivilingmiut from
Naujaat and
Chesterfield Inlet, influenced to do so by
whaler Captain
George Comer and others.
Baffin Islanders arrived 25 years later.
John Ell, who as a young child travelled with his mother Shoofly on Comer's schooners, eventually became the most famous of Southampton Island's re-settled population. The
Native Point archaeological site at the mouth of
Native Bay is the largest
Sadlermiut site on the island. == Geology ==