Biggest News aggregator with 200 million news articles | vimarsana.com

low-pitched clicking the clicks and clacks of a sperm whale. and, as you might expect from the creature with the biggest brain on the planet, their chitchat has more to it than meets the ear. this latest research, published in the royal society 0pen science journal, found there are at least seven separate clans of sperm whales in the pacific ocean, each with its own distinct culture and vocal dialect. while the sperm whales sound very simple, their patterns of clicks is a bit like morse code. the two clans we discovered this on, one sounds click—click—click—click and the other sounds click—click—click. . . click. the study also showed the whales use their distinct dialects to communicate and make democratic consensual decisions about where to go. one example saw them take an hour and a half to decide whether or not to make a 90—degree turn,

Related Keywords

Clicks , Creature , Sperm Whale , Planet , Story , Chitchat , Clacks , Brain , Ear , Sperm Whales , Research , Culture , Clans , Royal Society 0pen Science Journal , Pacific Ocean , 0 , Seven , Bit , Sounds , Patterns , Dialect , Morse Code , Two , One , Study , Dialects , Example , Whales , Decisions , Half , 90 ,

© 2024 Vimarsana