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![]() by Staff Writers Wellington (AFP) Jan 4, 2020
Seven whales were successfully herded back to sea after they survived a mass stranding at a New Zealand beach on Saturday, conservation officials said. About 1,000 locals and holidaymakers had spent several hours comforting the beached whales on the Coromandel Peninsula in the North Island. They were refloated during the afternoon high tide and shepherded to deeper waters by several boats. "Seven surviving (short-finned) pilot whales have been shepherded out of Matarangi Harbour. Our staff are burying four dead whales," the department of conservation tweeted. The marine conservation group Project Jonah had earlier appealed for trained medics to go to Mararangi to assist with the rescue. "While the locals are doing a great job, if you are a trained medic on holiday in the region, your help would be greatly appreciated," Project Jonah said on its Facebook page. Short-finned pilot whales are closely related to the long-finned pilot whales that are regularly involved in mass strandings in New Zealand waters. Two years ago, more than 330 pilot whales died in two strandings at Farewell Spit at the top of New Zealand's South Island.
![]() ![]() Ancient whale species sheds light on shift from limb- to tail-powered swimming Washington (UPI) Dec 20, 2019 Modern whales use their tails to swim, but their earliest ancestors, a group of semi-aquatic species known as protocetids, swam with their limbs. Due to gaps in the fossil record, the transition from limb- to tail-powered locomotion among whales isn't well-understood. But a newly discovered species of ancient whale, unearthed in Egypt, has offered scientists some clarity on the matter. "The biggest gap is that we lack associated skeletons of whale intermediates between land mammals and t ... read more
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