Blue Whales 101 | Nat Geo Wild

Blue Whales 101 | Nat Geo Wild
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Blue whales are the largest animals to have ever existed. Learn why they’re larger than any land animal and why they were hunted for years, making them endangered.
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National Geographic Wild is a place for all things animals and for animal-lovers alike. Take a journey through the animal kingdom with us and discover things you never knew before, or rediscover your favorite animals!

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Blue Whales 101 | Nat Geo Wild

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41 Comments

  1. Sperm whales I think are louder than blue whales. They make a clicking sound at 230 decibels which could vibrate divers to death and blast their ear drums. I'm sure the blues do too but I'd be terrified to dive with whales for those reasons!

  2. Why before dinosaurs were so large on the ground? Some as big as blue whales almost.. Gravity was the same bacj then want it.. So why now it is stopping and not before

  3. sperm whale

    The blue whale, the largest animal on earth, can produce loud whistling calls that reach up to 188 db. These calls can travel up to 500 miles underwater. But the loudest is the sperm whale. It makes a series of clicking noises that can reach as high as 230 db making it the loudest animal in the

  4. ?

    Sperm whales carry the largest and one of the most complicated biological sound generators in the animal kingdom. Their sound generating nose can reach a weight of more than 10 tonnes and generate the highest sound pressures ever measured from any animal with back calculated source sound pressure levels of 230 dB re.

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