A massive whale skull, believed to belong to a 40-ton humpback whale, washed ashore on Hatteras Island in North Carolina, attracting significant interest from both beachgoers and marine biologists. The rare interspecies interaction reveals whale society is more sophisticated and playful than previously thought. New projects are shedding light on how whales communicate, showing similarities to human language. An endangered whale was found dead in a gruesome discovery.
Endangered whale found dead in "gruesome" discovery https://t.co/FiCWYRw17J https://t.co/x2uAAu6ngU
The way whales communicate is closer to human language than we realized: A wave of new projects are taking us closer to understanding what whales are communicating to each other (MIT Technology Review) https://t.co/lPG3OH52ej
🗄️ From the archive: The rare interspecies interaction reveals whale society is more sophisticated — and more playful — than previously thought. https://t.co/bqjHKMSA03
A massive whale skull, believed to belong to a 40-ton humpback whale, washed ashore on Hatteras Island in North Carolina, attracting significant interest from both beachgoers and marine biologists. https://t.co/jLv8cSEp8z
study the whale