Strange but true. People had been living in isolation on St Kilda since 2000 BC and had probably been climbing cliffs barefoot for who knows how long. Consequently they evolved gripping toes.
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Photographs of St Kilda in the Trust collections reveal tourists hungry to ‘experience’ the ‘primitive’ life of the islanders.
www.nts.org.uk
If you want to study the various tribes and communities who make up the human history of the British Isles, St Kildans have to be one of the strangest and most fascinating. A virtually stone age community of land-bound, non-seafaring people surviving on a tiny treeless storm-lashed rock in the north Atlantic in almost total isolation for thousands of years, predating the Scots, the Picts, the Norsemen and the Romans, right up until the 20th century when they were rendered extinct by the modern world.
They're a topic in their own right.