Inside the Nail-Biting Quest to Find the 'Loneliest Whale'
Science Talk
Scientific American
4.2 • 644 Ratings
🗓️ 28 September 2021
⏱️ 19 minutes
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| 0:46.0 | It was a solitary sound from a single source, broadcasting at a frequency of 50 to 52 hertz, too low for human ears, too high for whales, and leaving tracks of acoustic data |
| 0:52.1 | across the Pacific. The mysterious thrum was first picked up in 1989. |
| 0:57.7 | It was detected by an array of surveillance hydrophones |
| 1:00.5 | set up by the U.S. Navy during the Cold War |
| 1:03.4 | to track Soviet submarines. |
| 1:06.1 | They initially thought it was mechanical, |
| 1:08.4 | possibly an enemy vessel. |
| 1:10.4 | It wasn't until four years later when these |
| 1:12.9 | signals were shared with marine scientist William Watkins that the sound took the shape of a |
| 1:18.1 | mysterious whale. They would come to name it simply 52. The creature was apparently vocalizing |
| 1:26.3 | at a frequency that no other marine animals seemed to echo back or understand. |
| 1:31.3 | From 1992 to 2004, Watkins, a bioacoustics expert and his colleagues at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, |
| 1:39.3 | tracked and recorded the 52-hertz calls. |
| 1:43.3 | And still, no one had seen it. For 12 years, 52's |
| 1:48.8 | sonic signature was the only proof of life of a whale that seemed to appear and disappear every |
| 1:54.8 | year during the mating seasons across the central and eastern North Pacific. Bill Watkins |
... |
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