In The Atlantic, Hundreds Of Whales Are Thrown Ashore. What Is Happening There? - Alternative View

In The Atlantic, Hundreds Of Whales Are Thrown Ashore. What Is Happening There? - Alternative View
In The Atlantic, Hundreds Of Whales Are Thrown Ashore. What Is Happening There? - Alternative View

Video: In The Atlantic, Hundreds Of Whales Are Thrown Ashore. What Is Happening There? - Alternative View

Video: In The Atlantic, Hundreds Of Whales Are Thrown Ashore. What Is Happening There? - Alternative View
Video: This Is Why All Whales Are Afraid of Orca 2024, May
Anonim

On Thursday, September 26, 2019, on the island of Boa Vista in Cape Verde (Cape Verde Islands), an event occurred that very alarmed local and not only environmentalists: on one of the beaches of the island, more than a hundred (134) whales were found shore the day before:

Image
Image
Image
Image

The reasons for such an event can be very different, ranging from illness and ending with secret military experiments. And while environmentalists racked their brains, pondering their empty theories, on September 26, 2019, the same thing happened on the other side of the Atlantic - in the state of Georgia.

Image
Image
Image
Image

The World Ocean, although it is very close, has been studied very little, as well as its inhabitants, who hear a lot and a lot in it.

Promotional video:

For example, in the ocean there is a sound like The Bloop - a low frequency sound recorded several times by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in the summer of 1997. At the moment, NOAA believes that icebergs rubbing against each other make this sound. LISTEN.

There is also such a strange sound like Julia, recorded in the equatorial region in 1999. LISTEN.

And in 1997, hydrophones in the Pacific Ocean for the first time registered such a phenomenon as Slow Down - a sound that, in places, resembles either distant crying or something falling from the sky. LISTEN.

Only on the NOAA website there are several dozen such mysterious underwater noises, and the most terrible is, apparently, the so-called Upsweep, which resembles either a siren or a howl from an unknown creature. LISTEN.

If the NOAA experts have no idea about the rest of the sounds like the above or about the so-called Bio-Duck sound and they reduce everything to either whale games or icebergs, then the Upsweep sound is 100% seismic, which has already been proven - it accompanies the eruptions of underwater volcanoes.

Most likely, 99.99% of such noises are still unknown to people and even have no idea how whales and dolphins feel when water reacts to certain processes in the earth's crust. Therefore, if on both sides of the Atlantic whales began to be thrown ashore on the same day - apparently there, at the bottom, something is happening, so we are following the development of events.