whale006
Research Blog | January 9, 2017
whale poop is part of the ocean’s circulatory system drawing iron up from the ocean bottoms as whales consume krill who consume phytoplankton who consume iron, and bringing it up to the surface oceans in the form of their faeces, which are released by the whales only in less water pressure levels.
whale005
Research Blog | January 8, 2017
When oceans become crust. Three-fifths of Earth’s crust lies underwater, spread out along the seafloor. More than four cubic miles of ocean crust forms each year, constantly regenerating like new skin across the globe. This ocean crust arises along mid-ocean ridges — underwater mountain ranges that ripple along the ocean floor like jagged scars.– Oceans apart:…
whale004
Research Blog | January 7, 2017
If you light a fire on the back of a whale, thinking it is an island, and drive stakes into its back, thinking you are on sandy land, you will almost certainly be tossed and turned into the sea.
whale003
Research Blog | January 6, 2017
When the fish is hungry it opens its mouth very wide, and breathes forth an exceedingly sweet odor. Then all the little fish stream thither, and, allured by the sweet smell, crowd into its throat. Then the whale closes its jaws and swallows them into its stomach, which is as wide as a valley.– Bartholomaeus Anglicus…
whale002
Research Blog | January 5, 2017
When whales were monsters… In medieval society, animals served as “scapegoats, mirror images and representations of human reality.– "Bad to the bone”? The Unnatural History of Monstrous Medieval Whales
whale001
Research Blog | January 4, 2017
Hexavalent chromium (chromium-6) is a toxin found in tissue samples of sperm whales. It’s a known carcinogen, mutagen and teratogen (”makes monstrous”). A compound used in the pigment and metal industries, it can easily make its way into water sources and out into the ocean if industry’s proper waste disposal methods are sloppy or ignored.