Two humpback whales have made record-breaking crossings between Australia and Brazil. Scientists say the whales were identified by their distinctive tail markings and traveled about 9,000 miles.
Scientists have documented an extraordinary feat of nature, revealing two humpback whales that undertook separate, record-breaking journeys across the Atlantic Ocean between Australia and Brazil.
Morning Overview on MSN
Two humpback whales just logged a 14,000-kilometer migration between Australia and Brazil — the longest cross-ocean trip ever recorded for the species
Somewhere between 2003 and 2025, a humpback whale left the warm breeding waters off Brazil, crossed the full width of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, and turned up in Hervey Bay, a shallow stretch of ...
Morning Overview on MSN
A humpback whale just shattered the migration record — one animal crossed more than 15,000 kilometers of open ocean between Brazil and Australia, the longest jour…
Sometime in 2003, a research boat off Abrolhos Bank, a coral archipelago roughly 70 kilometers from the coast of Bahia, ...
Most humpback swim around 8,000 kilometers between their Antarctic feeding grounds and more northerly breeding ground. These two individuals decided going sideways was much more exciting.
Two humpback whales have done something scientists almost never witness: separate migrations between Australia and Brazil ...
Half the world a whale! Humpbacks found making record-breaking migrations from Australia to Brazil. Humpback whales have been making record-breaking treks between breeding grounds in Australia and ...
Podcast produced in partnership with the Federal University of Pará (UFPA) and funded by the Council on Australia-Latin America Relations (COALAR), with support from The Conversation Australia, drew ...
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