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So, do you think animals feel lonely other than us? Maybe, maybe not, but in my eyes, this whale named Alice has really experienced the feeling of loneliness.
Alice is an ordinary gray whale, the characteristics of the gray whale are obvious, the color of the young whale is mostly black gray, but after adulthood, it will appear brownish gray and light gray, the general gray whale is densely covered with light-colored markings, as well as a variety of patches composed of whale lice and barnacles, etc., the number of gray whales is extremely small, it is understood that the current population is only about 30,000 heads, and the number itself is not much, and Alice is in this environment, very lonely.
When people first found Alice, it was in the Mediterranean, this whale was originally migrated from California to Alaska with the entire whale group, but due to the shrinking of the ice, the northwest passage was opened, so Alice accidentally went wrong, swam into the passage, kept moving forward, and finally slowly reached the Mediterranean Sea.
Surprisingly, this gray whale named Alice, tossing and turning from the Atlantic Ocean to the Atlantic, passing back and forth halfway around the world, seems to have been looking for something, and after the doctor's investigation, it was discovered that this gray whale is a defect, probably a blue whale and a finwhale crossing, which also causes its vocal cords to be different from the gray whale vocal cords.
Alice is currently the only whale in the world that can make a sound of 52 Hz, and the normal frequency of ordinary normal whales is only about 15-25 Hz, that is, no whale can understand Alice at all, it has not had a relative or friend for many years, no one hears it when it sings, and no one will pay attention to it when it is sad, just like that, it has been going on for decades, and finally died in an unknown place.
It's hard to imagine what Alice has experienced, although the whale itself is lonely, and there are only a few hundred thousand or even tens of thousands of them in the ocean of Nuoda, but I believe that if they can see their own kind, they will also cheer and jump, but Alice can't, no whale can understand it in any case, so it has been across more than half the world.
It wasn't until '04 that Watkins, a scholar specializing in Alice, died of cancer, and no one has seen it since, imagining it to be a solitary whale, swimming alone in the sea, singing songs that no one can understand, and it is a horn that is unique in this world.
It's the same with us, many times we feel that no one can understand ourselves, in fact, it's just that the frequency of what we experience is different, whether we like to be lonely or like to be gregarious, we are all qualified and normal people.
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The loneliest whale in the world, only because of the unique 52 Hz, has no relatives and no companions.
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The loneliest whale in the world is Alice.
A whale discovered in 1989, the loneliest whale in the world, that is, a whale with a wavelength of meters, it is called Alice, the whale weighs 20 tons, it was discovered in 1989 and has been tracked since 1992. It has not had a single relative or friend for so many years, no one hears it when it sings, and no one pays attention to it when it is sad. The reason is that in our air, the wavelength of this lone whale is only meters, compared to 17-23 meters for normal whales, and its wavelength has always been different.
In 1992, when Dr. William Watkins, a marine mammalian at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in the United States, analyzed this recording, a whale sound frequency map caught his attention, under normal circumstances, the frequency of blue whales is 10-39 Hz, and the fin whale is 20 Hz, this frequency is inaudible to human ears, but Alice's frequency is as high as 52 Hz, that is, in the eyes of other whales, this whale that emits a frequency of 52 Hz is like a mute, The sound produced cannot be heard by other whales.
Description of Alice:
Acoustic data from any hydrophony system in the North Pacific basin did not identify other calls with similar characteristics, and only a single sequence of calls was recorded at a time, with no overlapping ......Neither the trajectory nor the location and movement of other whale species showed a correlation ......”
Even after careful monitoring year after year, there is only one voice with such characteristics, and there is only one ** per season."
It may be hard to accept. It may be the only whale of its kind in the vast ocean."
This ** was included in Deep Sea Research in August 2004 by William Watkins; A month later, the author died.
A few months before his death, he and his research partners published the results of their 52Hz search in the central and eastern North Pacific Oceans in an academic journal, summarizing the tracking record over the past 12 years: "This whale with a 52Hz voice is unusual and unique".
William Watkins, a marine mammalian at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, pursued the 52-sing whale for 12 years from 1992 until his death in 2004 at the age of 78.
Some people say that perhaps the only person in the world who can understand Alice's singing is Dr. Watkins, but Bole is gone, and Maxima has disappeared, and that is the last ......time people have heard Alice's singing
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Alice is known as the loneliest whale in the world.
Unlike many other whales, it emits much more often than other whales. According to relevant research studies, the average whale frequency is only 15 25 Hz, while Alice has 52 Hz, this gap can be imagined, so its difference may also be one of the reasons for loneliness.
Review. Modern cetaceans are divided into baleen whales and toothed whales, both of which evolved from the ancient order of the Occupante whale and diverged at the beginning of the Oligocene 34 million years ago. The order Archaeocetama is actually a tall paraphyletic group that contains the most recent common ancestor of the extinct ancient cetaceans, but not all the descendants of its most recent common ancestor (i.e., modern cetaceans).
There are about 15 species of baleen whales, which belong to 4 families: Right Whales, New Baleen Whales (or Small Stretch Frontridge Whales), Baleen Whales, and Gray Whales.
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The loneliest whale in the world, only because of the unique 52 Hz, has no relatives and no companions.
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In 1989, when Alice was wandering alone in the Pacific Ocean, she was discovered by scientists, and there was no response from whales every day, and the normal whale sound frequency is 15-25 Hz, but Alice is an exception, its sound rate is as high as 52 Hz.
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