Are whales trying to communicate with us?
source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/12/magazine/12whales-t.html
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- leahl
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They were beaked whales, of which there are 20 known species. Relatively small members of the cetacean family, they resemble outsize dolphins, and because of their deep-diving ways, they are among the least observed and understood. Curiously, the stranding on Isla San José followed by just one day the stranding of at least 14 other beaked whales 5,700 miles away along the Canary Islands beaches of Lanzarote and Fuerteventura. Rescuers there worked feverishly to water down the whales and keep them cool. They all eventually died, however, and some of their bodies were immediately sent to the nearby city Las Palmas de Gran Canaria for analysis.
It is nearly impossible to pinpoint the precise cause of a whale’s stranding. Theories invariably include factors like the straying of a sick and dying whale leader, faithfully followed by the members of his pod, or sudden shallows along the shores of a migratory route. The two strandings in September 2002, however, did have something intriguing in common. It was noted by the Canary Islands rescuers that naval vessels were carrying out exercises that day not far offshore, a situation that had accompanied four other mass whale strandings on Canary Islands beaches since 1985. And while no such military exercises were being conducted off the beaches of Isla San José, the vessel that the scientists radioed turned out to be a research ship dragging an array of powerful underwater air guns that were repeatedly set off the previous morning in the course of seismic tests of the region’s ocean floor.
The suspicion of a causal relationship between whale strandings and either seismic tests or the use of new high-tech sonar tracking devices in military-training exercises had been mounting for some time. Similar coincidences had been noted off the coasts of Brazil, the Bahamas, the Galápagos Islands, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Japan, as well as in the waters off Italy and Greece. Necropsies performed on a number of the whales revealed lesions about their brains and ears. The results of the examinations performed on the Canary Islands whales, however, added a whole other, darker dimension to the whale-stranding mystery. In addition to bleeding around the whales’ brains and ears, scientists found lesions in their livers, lungs and kidneys, as well as nitrogen bubbles in their organs and tissue, all classic symptoms of a sickness that scientists had naturally assumed whales would be immune to: the bends.
It might sound like something out of a bad sci-fi film: whales sent into suicidal dashes toward the ocean’s surface to escape the madness-inducing echo chamber that we humans have made of their sound-sensitive habitat. But since the Canary Islands stranding in 2002, similar necropsy results have turned up with a number of beached whales, and the deleterious effects of sonar and other human-generated sounds on ocean ecosystems have been firmly established.
As described in a 2005 report published by the Natural Resources Defense Council, “Sounding the Depths II: The Rising Toll of Sonar, Shipping and Industrial Ocean Noise on Marine Life,” oceans that as recently as 100 years ago had been one vast, ongoing whale and piscine chorus have now essentially become senses-wilting miasmas of human-made noise.
See more at the link:
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- tags:
- Green, Environment, Climate Change, Whales
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LadyArbel
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http://www.russiatoday.com/Top_News/2009-07-21/Russian_Navy_UFO_records_say_alie...
I don't know how reputable this "source" is but it is def. interesting.
- 2 years ago
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LadyArbel
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Gravity_Man
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Yeah, Omshaantih, but don't forget that the nuclear submarines out testing their new Stealth cloaking systems ran into each other out there in the Atlantic, twice I think but at least once. One time maybe a close call. What chemicals and stuff was released we'll be told that WHENEVER THEY DEIGN TO RELEASE IT and not before.
The so-called "Truth Embargo" covers a lot more than withheld UFO information. I'm sure the oceanlife already knows an epidemic is in progress... but hmm, more likely they think a major war has been declared on sealife.
- 2 years ago
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Gravity_Man
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omshaantih
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so sad...i believe the naval sonar definitely is killing massive amounts of whales...even here in NJ there have been many dead marine animals recently...and when i have travelled down the eastern seaboard many other beaches have had dead whales on them... it is an epidemic around here
- 2 years ago
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omshaantih
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TommyTooThumbs
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I had not previously heard about this. I find it to be most intriguing. This is why I love current.com/green!
- 2 years ago
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TommyTooThumbs
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Gravity_Man
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What we do to the planet adds up then sometimes the planet gives it back in one pop too. Early News, July 15 2009, New Zealand quake registers 7.8 and may cause tsunami.
Feed the Devil, it will likely later be adjusted upwards of 8.0.
- 2 years ago
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Gravity_Man
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Progresshiv
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Machine mania claims many victims.
- 2 years ago
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Progresshiv
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Gravity_Man
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Interesting. What would a whale be trying to tell us? Do whales cuss? Somebody! We need a Study here.
- 2 years ago
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Gravity_Man
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ALLNATURALVEGANS
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wow, this is so sad.. and unacceptable... we must make the navy and everyone else stop the madness with their sonar....not cool guys!
- 2 years ago
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ALLNATURALVEGANS
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larrysnotes
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ALLNATURALVEGANS:
Like that will happen.
- 2 years ago
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larrysnotes
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larrysnotes
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No ! They think we are too dumb to talk too.
- 2 years ago
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larrysnotes
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Gravity_Man
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Whale's hearing mechanisms are in direct contact with the pressurized water, so whatever sonar waves goes rippling through the water will go tearing on into the flesh. However, if the sonar waves are hitting into the whales on the way DOWN then rebounding off the bottom -catching them in between- that's a whole new ballgame => THE WAVEFORMS WOULD COLLIDE TOGETHER INSIDE THE WHALE'S BRAIN & EARS.
Yep, I could see a doubled force blowing the blood out of their head. My, my, my, we are nice people. This is a job for PETA & ASPCA. Whichever one deals with penguin babies being bludgeoned to death with clubs because all this is is a sonar "club" meeting and combining inside the whale's head.
- 2 years ago
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Gravity_Man
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kennymotown
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Gravity_Man:
Yes that sonar and harp thing are screwing up their habitat. Where is that great white whale when his clan needs him.
- 2 years ago
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kennymotown
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Gravity_Man
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Gravity_Man:
I think the way it works with evolution is that once the next species gets up to bat it has earned the right to finish off the other animals it came from, so they can't do it again.
Less competition that way.
- 2 years ago
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Gravity_Man
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Valence
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A day after my birthday YaY. lol
- 2 years ago
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Valence
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Sumbodyswatchin
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Our actions affect nature? Nah. Bible says it's all ours to abuse and destory as we wish. We dont have to find any kind of balance or try to fit in to the natural order of things, WE OWN IT! DUH!!
- 2 years ago
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Sumbodyswatchin
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remanns
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Sumbodyswatchin:
not a christian,..anymore,.....but "caretaker" to big "G" god was always the contractual arrangement. Sort of an implied "He" cares about this shit,....so don't fuck up the management.
- 2 years ago
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remanns
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yesindeed
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Sumbodyswatchin:
man, step off your pedestal. you're a mere animal yourself.
- 2 years ago
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yesindeed
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Nephwrack
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Sumbodyswatchin:
dominion implies responsibility.
- 2 years ago
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Nephwrack
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pjacobs51
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It would seem that with all the new satellite technology, GPS navigation, laser mapping, and such, we could do away with the outdated sonar tech and it's obvious devastating effects on marine life.
- 2 years ago
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pjacobs51
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jefftego
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Thanks for posting this! Although the Navy says otherwise, I think there is enough information in on the impacts of sonar on whales to know that it is causing major problems. On the bright side, the part of the article that talks about the friendly grays in Baja is very moving and inspiring.
- 2 years ago
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jefftego
