Hi-yi-yi
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Hi-yi-yi (or Hi-aiy) was a fictitious archipelago in the Pacific Ocean, created by Gerolf Steiner, a zoology professor at the University of Heidelberg, to be the habitat of his equally fictitious Rhinogradentia.
[edit] Description
The tropical archipelago measured some 1,690 km², and the largest peak (2,230 m) was on the main island, Hiddudify (Hy-dud-dye-fee). The islands were
- Annoorussawubbissy
- Osovitissy
- Owsuddowsa
- Noorubbissy
- Miroovilly
- Towteng-Awko
- Nawissy
- Hiddudify
- Naty
- Ownavussa
- Lownunnoia
- Mittuddinna
- Vinsy
- Shanelukha
- Mara
- Lowlukha
- Koavussa
- Awkoavussa
Each island was home to a distinctive fauna, dominated by many species of Rhinogradentia or Snouters – the only mammals in the archipelago, besides the humans.
[edit] History
Hiddudify was inhabited by the Huacha-Hatchis.
The first description of the archipelago published in Europe was provided by Swedish explorer Einar Pettersson-Skämtkvist, who arrived in Hiddudify in 1941, after escaping from a Japanese prisoner camp.
In the late 1950s, as a consequence of atomic bomb testing, the islands sank suddenly into the ocean, destroying all traces of the snouters.
[edit] References
- Harald Stümpke, The Snouters: Form and Life of the Rhinogrades. Translated by Leigh Chadwick. University of Chicago Press (1967).