
— PALAU · MARIANA ISLANDS · SOLOMON ISLANDS —
Pacific War Relics, Rediscovered.
Inside the jungles, caves, and forgotten battlefields of Peleliu, Saipan, and Guadalcanal — the untold stories of WWII’s Pacific Theater, documented where history still lies untouched.
ABOUT GEOFFREY
A Relic Hunter in the Pacific Theater
For years, I’ve been walking the same jungles American Marines and Japanese soldiers crossed in 1944. From the coral cliffs of Peleliu to the cave systems of Saipan, I document what eighty years of nature couldn’t erase — rusted tanks, bullet casings, downed aircraft, and the silent traces of one of history’s most brutal campaigns.
Every piece I find stays where it lies. I document, I photograph, I share — because these islands are living museums, and they deserve to be seen.
Three Theaters. Thirteen Islands. One Mission.
Explore the battles where the Pacific War was fought — and where its relics still remain.

— PALAU CLUSTER —
The Battle of Peleliu
Peleliu · Ngesebus · Angaur · Babeldaob
The forgotten hell of the Pacific. Two months of coral caves, limestone cliffs, and one of the bloodiest Marine engagements of the war. Today, the jungle still hides what the battle left behind.

— MARIANA ISLANDS —
The Battle of Saipan
Saipan · Tinian · Guam
The turning point that placed Tokyo within B-29 range. Three islands, one campaign, countless relics still scattered across jungle hillsides and abandoned airstrips.

— SOLOMON ISLANDS —
The Battle of Guadalcanal
Guadalcanal · Tulagi
America’s first major Pacific offensive. Six months of hell in the Solomon Islands, and today a quiet landscape hiding the wreckage of that first brutal push.
— INTERACTIVE MAP —
Every Site. Every Story. One Map.
From the coral reefs of Palau to the volcanic hills of Guam — click any pin to discover the relics, the stories, and the battles fought on that ground.

Field Reports
Expedition stories, relic identification, and what the jungle still remembers.
- Identifying WWII Japanese Bullet Casings: A Field Guide from Saipan
Eighty years after the fall of Saipan, Japanese bullet casings still surface from the island’s red soil every season. Here’s how to identify what you’re looking at — caliber, manufacturer, year, and why each detail matters. The Soil Still Remembers It was a short walk off the main trail, maybe twenty meters into the undergrowth… Read more: Identifying WWII Japanese Bullet Casings: A Field Guide from Saipan
Follow the Expeditions
Every month, new battlefields, new relics, new discoveries — live from the Pacific.
Document.
Preserve.
Respect.
These islands are living museums. Every relic stays where it lies. Every story belongs to the land that carries it. This site exists to honor what remains — and the men who left it behind.
Have a Story? A Question? A Piece to Identify?
Collectors, historians, veteran families, fellow explorers — reach out. Every artifact has a story, and I read every message.
