The Whale Museum News & Events
Three scientists stand on a hillside on the remote island of Melinka in Southern Chile. In the distance, across the shimmering waters of the Gulf of Corcovado, are the majestic snow-capped peaks of the Andes mountains.
All three are peering through high-powered binoculars, scanning the horizon methodically.
Suddenly, biologist Yacquiline Montecinos spots a spray of water piercing the horizon, six miles or so off shore.
"There … whale. Blue whale," she says excitedly. Montecinos has seen hundreds of these spouts, but she still gets excited when she finds one.
And why not? She is part of a team researching a previously unknown population of blue whales, the biggest mammal on the planet, bigger than the biggest dinosaur. They can be up to 100 feet long and 100 tons.
It is thrilling to see, but it is also serious science.
(Note: The Blue Whale Center, the World Wildlife Fund and others are lobbying the government of Chile to declare the entire Gulf of Corcovado a Marine Protected Area.)
Click here to read the complete story and watch the video on ABC.com.