An open-source whale tag that records sound, movement, and environmental data will enable scientists to study and decode ...
Beaked whales are rarely spotted. Now scientists are using underwater sounds to help identify these elusive creatures.
Scientists photograph the elusive ginkgo-toothed beaked whale, the source of the BW43 echolocation pulse, for the first time.
SANTA CRUZ, CA–When Jason Gedamke and Daniel Costa first went to Australia to record the sounds of dwarf minke whales, people told them they were wasting their time. There were very few reports of ...
Scientists are using underwater microphones to study beaked whales, the ocean’s most elusive mammals. Echolocation clicks ...
AZ Animals US on MSN
Deep-Sea Ghost: How Scientists Finally Caught the Whale No One Had Ever Seen
For more than 60 years, the ginkgo-toothed beaked whale (Mesoplodon ginkgodens) was one of the ocean’s greatest mysteries.
KELLY: It's the song of a humpback whale, a type of baleen whale. COEN ELEMANS: All the baleen whales make extremely low frequency sounds, and it sounds like a bit like humming, like, (imitating whale ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists capture first-ever photos of an elusive beaked whale that had never been seen alive
For years, a strange, repetitive clicking sound pulsed through the deep Pacific. It was heard again and again on hydrophones ...
COEN ELEMANS: All the baleen whales make extremely low frequency sounds, and it sounds like a bit like humming, like, (imitating whale sound), something like this. And it's really hard for me to do ...
Scientists have long struggled to study how whales produce sound. A new paper in the journal Nature paints the most complete picture yet of how... Study provides most detailed analysis yet of how ...
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