News

Blue whales have been singing less, and it could be a bellwether of climate change. Warming oceans affect the availability of ...
A new poetry collection, an illustrated book about what happens after a blue whale dies, and a ‘Moby-Dick’ exhibit at PEM By Nina MacLaughlin Globe Correspondent,Updated June 6, 2024, 11:27 a.m.
Chaucer's Books will host local children’s author Robin Yardi for a reading of her latest book for kids “I Know the Whale,” 2 p.m. Sunday, April 6 at the ...
Blue whales have gone silent. Why that has scientists worried about Earth’s biggest animals ... and the ocean - A dense pool of warm water dubbed ‘The Blob’ drove unprecedented temperature increases ...
The production company told Biagini they had a hard time capturing blue whales in the past. That’s because the blue whale, despite its 90-foot length and up to 150-ton weight, is not easy to spot.
"Like this little stamp, it has the blue whale on it," says Jennifer Blotzer. They added the blue stamp to their book, along with some memories that will last just as long.
King of the Blue Ocean–or KOBO–is one of the museum’s signature attractions. The blue whale was accidentally struck by a vessel in 1998 and brought to the museum two years later.
The first-ever footage of a blue whale calf suckling, filmed by a snorkeller in East Timor in South-East Asia, has been released. “It is certainly not a newborn calf,” says Karen Edyvane at ...
For the first time, scientists have recorded the heart rate of a blue whale, finding it can drop to as low as two beats per minute while diving deep beneath the surface. The fastest rate recorded ...