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Videos (15) | Sift Talk (0) | Blogs (4) | Comments (23) |
Videos (15) | Sift Talk (0) | Blogs (4) | Comments (23) |
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zombieater (Member Profile)
Your video, Kayaker gets up close with a blue whale., has made it into the Top 15 New Videos listing. Congratulations on your achievement. For your contribution you have been awarded 1 Power Point.
Sir David Attenborough - The Blue Whale
Protip, "blue whale" is never the correct answer on QI for any question.
Frog Jesus (50 seconds without credits)
good luck crucifying a blue whale. all the others are pretty easy, though tuna are some quick suckas.
Frog Jesus (50 seconds without credits)
kittens, puppies, children, old people, tuna, asparagus and blue whales.
Sorry I'll take back asparagus, that's just cruel
Did you know -- Animals
Tags for this video have been changed from 'polar, bear, blue, whale, ferret, dolphin, giraffe, brids, chameleon' to 'polar, bear, blue, whale, ferret, dolphin, giraffe, birds, chameleon' - edited by doogle
berticus (Member Profile)
ping
( @ aquatic origin of )
Blue Whale (from The Blue Planet documentary)
>> ^berticus:
nature british and maybe even mystery ??
aye. and a very *happy *mystery at that.
and, really fuckin' *big.
Unidentified Sea Serpent Type Creature
My google-fu suggests that it may be from a phylum of marine worms Nemertean worm, which has puzzled people before. While 7 to 10 feet is long, Nemertean worms "range in length from 1 mm to as much as 30 metres (100 feet) in the case of the bootlace worm, Lineus longissimus. Some texts quote lengths of up to 60 m, in which case, L. longissimus would be the longest animal alive (female blue whales reach about 34 m)".
To be honest, this sounds like a bit of a media overhype, especially from what appears to be the original news article (which I just found), that says, "Friends of Jay who work at the Smithsonian say it may be some sort of Nemertean Worm, but they're puzzled by some of its characteristics. For now they're simply calling it "undescribed"." Compare this with the news article quoted in Neatorama, which looks to have ripped everything from the original except for that small yet very crucial bit of information.
Also, I'm not going to mess with your tags, but might you consider changing the cryptozoology tag? Cryptozoology specifically refers to the search for organisms rumored or believed to exist, but that have not been conclusively shown to have exist. This video is of a creature that has not been identified yet but whose existence is not currently in question, and whose existence had not been hypothesized previously, so it seems to fall well into the realm of marine biology, not cryptozoology.