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Beluga whale found dead
Scientists are mystified by the carcass of a young beluga whale found in a
river in central Alaska, nearly 1,000 miles from its natural ocean habitat.
The first guess is the 8-foot-long whale, which often feed on fish in
estuaries and the mouths of rivers, swam away from the ocean in search of
food.
Canoeists found the whale June 9 on the Tanana River about 40 miles
southwest of Fairbanks. Sylvia Brunner, a marine mammals researcher at the
museum in Fairbanks, identified the decomposing carcass. The "bloated, black
thing on the beach" was about 12 feet from the river's edge, she said. It
could have died in the river last fall and frozen during the winter, Brunner
said. On the other hand, the whale could have entered the river this spring
seeking fish heading for the ocean. "When you get a carcass like that, there are a lot of unanswered questions,"
she said.
The carcass was taken to the museum, where it will be "cleaned and prepared
as a full skull and skeleton and we will preserve tissue samples. Belugas
are toothed whales and belong to the same group as sperm whales, killer
whales, dolphins and porpoises.
source: Fox News
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