1.
Archimedes threw himself off the ship and onto a whale that was headed for in the direction of a whaling vessel the pirates had passed earlier
2.
When the whale was caught, Archimedes hopped off the dying whale and joined the crew of whaling humans
3.
Their whale research seemed to involve puncturing the whale with several more holes than before
4.
Archimedes had never seen a humpback whale die from harpoons before and so added it to his memory files
5.
I was seven months pregnant at the time; I remember standing in the rain at Mum’s burial service feeling like a beached whale
6.
Wildlife includes boar, brown bear, lizard and whale
7.
It’s the whale capital of Central America, with 22
8.
And whale call sirens to blow the whistle
9.
Fourthly, Salt fish of all kinds, whale fins, whalebone, oil, and blubber, not caught by and cured on board British vessels, when imported into Great Britain, are subject to double aliens duty
10.
The tonnage bounties given to the white herring and whale fisheries may, perhaps, be considered as somewhat of this nature
11.
mammals - the blue whale
12.
The Roman returned with twenty-two hundred barrels of whale oil and
13.
One of the first things Jon learned was that whales supplied two important resources, whale oil and baleen
14.
Whale oil was used as a lamp fuel and for making candles, as there was no electricity, natural gas, or kerosene for lighting in those days
15.
Sperm whales offer the greatest amount of whale oil, and are the largest whales to have teeth
16.
were launched whenever a whale was sighted
17.
particularly another sail or more importantly, a whale
18.
The captain hoped it was a sperm whale which offers the greatest amount of whale oil
19.
Experienced whalers can tell different whale species by the size and shape of their spout
20.
The crew failed to catch the whale at
21.
The captain’s logbook records the different whale species and how many barrels of oil they produce
22.
A few days after the first whale was spotted, Jon heard another
23.
steadily toward the whale
24.
They realized it was a sperm whale,
25.
and there would be lots of whale oil from this one
26.
” This is what they called the event when a whale boat was
27.
dragged behind the whale at speeds up to twenty-five miles per
28.
whale until it lay exhausted on the surface
29.
“Chimney’s afire!” Jon helped to kill his first whale
30.
clear of the harpoon rope line when the sleigh ride begins, as he could get rope burns and be dragged overboard by the whale
31.
Of course, killing the whale was just the beginning
32.
whale was towed back to the Roman, where the crew tied it to the ship
33.
After this, a platform was hung over the whale
34.
whale and to cut it into smaller sections
35.
were then used to lift or drag the pieces of blubber into the try-pots for rendering into whale oil
36.
the unsuspecting whale, the officer on board would call to the
37.
the lance that would deal the deathblow to the wounded whale
38.
He would now be an officer in charge of a whale boat
39.
during a whale chase
40.
He would be the officer to kill the whale
41.
buying whale products from the whalers
42.
of oil and whale products
43.
After the return of the Liverpool to New Bedford in 1851, with a full load of whale oil and related whale products, Jonathan
44.
officer in charge of one of the whale boats lowered during the
45.
The journey to the Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea was successful, and the Liverpool returned to New Bedford in 1853 with a full load of whale oil and related material
46.
who were always in hot pursuit of the whale men when they
47.
They had actually captured only one whale during
48.
It was a frustrating time for Jessie, but not unusual to have long periods of time without whale sightings for a typical whaling voyage
49.
hundred barrels of whale oil and twenty-two hundred pounds of
50.
the demand for whale oil was greater than the supply, and this
51.
After leaving Honolulu, the Milo captured her first whale of the voyage on April 27 during a rainy and overcast day
52.
putt-putt golf there are dark caves, stampeding elephants and once there was a report of a giant whale that ate golf balls
53.
the result was a ship’s hold filled with barrels of whale oil and whalebone
54.
The Milo needed to offload its whale harvest, and Honolulu was the place to do it
55.
time in processing the whale harvest on board the ship
56.
In addition, whale oil and bones needed to be offloaded and sold on the open
57.
several weeks in Honolulu, offloading the whale harvest for
58.
In fact, this was about the only material transferred over to the Shenandoah, as there was practically no whale oil in the hold
59.
It is reliably reported that he had a whale of a good time
60.
when they were not engaged in working on a captured whale
61.
through all of the steps necessary to process a whale, from
62.
bringing the whale alongside the ship, to cutting and boiling the blubber
63.
continued to process and boil the whale blubber from the recent
64.
On June 22, the Shenandoah, while still sailing close to Cape Thaddeus, sighted two ships and steamed after the nearest, which was working on a captured whale
65.
On this morning of June 23, all hands were at work on the whale, and each man knew what his
66.
Jessie and the children were inside the captain’s quarters where they spent most of their time when a whale was being worked
67.
This whale would be a welcome
68.
with one or more of the many whaleships in the vicinity, but that would happen after the current whale was completely processed
69.
Milo, announced what had happened and ordered the work on the dead whale to be stopped and the decks to be washed and
70.
filled with barrels of whale oil and bone
71.
Captain Hawes began the voyage in search of whale oil to meet the world’s demand
72.
He knew that whale oil was a very profitable business
73.
produce than whale oil
74.
have more markets and more uses than whale oil ever did
75.
Carved or engraved images on whale ivory
76.
“Do you really, you slimy piece of whale liver? You may be a better swordsman, but I am a better swords-woman and you have injured my love
77.
I sat up in the hold of a boat dimly lit by a whale oil lamp
78.
Just then, a black and white whale leaped from the water
79.
I asked, “Do you think that whale would have gotten out of
80.
In the first edition of The Origin of Species, where he wrote he had observed bears floating for hours in the water with their mouths open eating insects floating on the surface, said: "I see no obstacle to a race of bears becoming, by natural selection, more and more aquatic in their structure and habits, with an increasingly large mouth, to produce a monstrous beast like a whale "
81.
He had discovered, in a skeleton of Basilosaurus, the first knee of a whale located in one part of the spine, much lower than he had imagined
82.
Klah’s story was about a whale hunt and also greatly impressed our hosts
83.
had portended that whale beachings around the globe were connected to major
84.
you are as a whale in the seas, and you came out with your rivers, and troubled the waters with your feet, and fouledst their rivers
85.
I did have a little trouble with “the bush that was shaped like a whale
86.
They are equivalent to a stingray, whale and bat
87.
The memorial service was held at his New London funeral home on Whale Oil Row
88.
if it does, I will gladly give some of that to Noah and the Whale as back-
89.
Of every whale
90.
40 For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the whale so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the Earth
91.
But the sun now shone out a little and lo! I see a mighty beast like a whale and out of its mouth fiery locusts proceeded
92.
someone pointed into the horizon at a breaching whale or a
93.
was so exhausted from trying to beach that whale, that I knew that
94.
"He probably thinks it's a whale," said Mary with a laugh
95.
This in all likelihood will precipitate as a whale of a headache
96.
This friend took a photo of a breeching whale in the distance
97.
Because of the angle and depth of the picture, this photo seemed as if the whale was breeching right over our kayaks, even though we were physically still quite far away from the whales
98.
Nereus spun and expanded, turning into a killer whale, but I grabbed his dorsal fin as he burst out of the water
99.
We smashed into a photo-board, Grover’s head going straight into the hole where tourists would put their faces, pretending to be Noo-Noo the Friendly Whale
100.
You can go whale watching
1.
"Has he ever whaled it any?" turning to me
1.
The mermaids keened like whales all around the house, singing for their friends to come
2.
As soon as he was up there, Marley Williams Hatch wet his lips and blew out a tune loud enough that all the kangaroos in Australia perked up their ears, and all the whales under the sea sang at once
3.
This individual was possibly off radar as a result of internecine strife within the C-Block or for falling foul of any one of the various killer whales that this particular little fish may have been sharing the pond with
4.
"Just as the whales had done," the bartender said
5.
The real proof of intelligence was to be able to think deep thoughts while straight like the great whales," the bartender said
6.
"How do the great whales solve it?" she asked them
7.
"And the whales solve it with song, my dear," he answered Glenelle
8.
Whales sang in the deeps of
9.
Whales sang in the deeps of the ocean
10.
With garden-like islands, the blue seas support dolphins and whales
11.
Popular species include green and hawksbil turtles, great blue heron, Scarlet Macaw, manatees, humpback whales, bottle-nosed dolphins and coral
12.
This smal central American country is the only one with no Atlantic coastline, nevertheless you see dolphins and whales passing through its Pacific waters
13.
The only country where sperm whales live al year round
14.
With 21 beaches, there are warm water sharks, green sea turtles, and migrating whales and dolphins
15.
(including the whales) and church bells ring
16.
The far south (near the South Pole) is home to whales, penguins and migrating seabirds
17.
You see, hippos in general are among the largest living mammals on the planet, coming in at sumo wrestler size along with a few others like the elephants, some rhinoceroses, and whales
18.
They also have two carpet whales that some people would call cats
19.
Her short story, Whales Call, was selected for publication in the 2011 Spring Edition of Shadowbox Magazine
20.
One of the first things Jon learned was that whales supplied two important resources, whale oil and baleen
21.
Sperm whales offer the greatest amount of whale oil, and are the largest whales to have teeth
22.
Sperm whales do not contain baleen
23.
whales, and the only way to catch them was to hunt them at sea
24.
spent hours learning how to carve intricate art onto the teeth of sperm whales
25.
whales spout turned red with blood, and the crew cried out,
26.
whales and the processing of the blubber
27.
Once whales were sighted and the captain gave
28.
day was on chasing whales and storing oil in the ship’s hold
29.
He had to plan the route that the voyage should take, and this required knowledge of where the whales would be
30.
On the twenty-ninth, they saw whales in the morning,
31.
Of course, the main targets were the whales, and the E
32.
in that some days were very busy catching whales and
33.
Jones cruised along the west coast of Africa for the entire month and saw whales only one time and
34.
The whales began to show up, and the E
35.
Up until this time, the Milo had seen a few whales but had caught none
36.
expecting to see whales in this location but took advantage of the opportunity and was able to put some barrels of oil in the ship’s hold by the end of the day
37.
Whales have been doing
38.
In 1864, however, it was a rough time for the whales
39.
It was soon to come, but in 1864, the whaleships were out there to hunt and kill the whales for their
40.
ship, Kate Prince, out of Whales
41.
Milo was located off the coast of California where the weather was warm and the whales were close by
42.
At the same time, on the other side of the world, the Milo was sailing off the coast of Mexico in search of whales
43.
During the month of January 1865, the Milo captured a rather large number of whales and spent much of the
44.
whales were captured and processed, and there was a lot of
45.
facetiously, “we have entered into a treaty with the whales, and are up here by special agreement to dispense of their mortal
46.
anything I can’t help, but the whales needn’t owe me much of a
47.
13, the Milo was actively searching for whales in the Bering Sea along with a number of other whaleships from New England,
48.
The Milo had caught only two whales during this time
49.
whales were also arriving from the southern Pacific; it was the
50.
whales, because when they were killed, the humpbacks sank and
51.
They were sure that there would be many more whales and
52.
of whales, as the men had the means and ability to capture them
53.
contact with the whaleship, Mercury, chasing whales in a stiff gale off Cape Bering
54.
anchors and getting the ship ready for catching whales as soon as the opportunity presented itself
55.
However, of course, the Milo was not in pursuit, as we know she was searching for whales and had no idea where the
56.
In the meantime, back in the Pacific, the Milo was doing very well with a large number of whales caught off the coast of
57.
profitable three years for the Milo as she caught a large number of whales during this period and filled her hold with oil and
58.
In the Arctic wastes, birds, whales, sea lions and enemy warships have gone about their destined affairs time and again
59.
Valley of the Whales [15]
60.
15 - Extract from a note of the National Geographic magazine in which Philip Gingerich, one of the researchers who worked in Wadi Al-Hitan, Egypt, known as the valley of the whales, is interviewed
61.
In northern Egypt, about 200 km from Cairo, is Wadi Al-Hitan, known as the Valley of the Whales
62.
There, a group of researchers among which was Philip Gingerich, a vertebrate paleontologist at the University of Michigan, dug and studied the fossil remains of whales
63.
Gingerich and his team are responsible for having located over a thousand fossils of whales in the last twenty seven years
64.
Gingerich himself recounted: "The enormous environmental transition of whales began to interest me more and more
65.
By 1989, the paleontologist found the link between whales and their terrestrial ancestors
66.
Just imagining the whales who swam here, and thinking about how they lived and died, and how much the world has changed since then, puts you in touch with something much bigger than you, your community or your daily life'
67.
He stretched his arms to embrace the dark horizon and the desert with its sandstone formations sculpted by wind and its countless silent whales
68.
The next moment that piece of land did not exist at all but was a huge ocean where whales and sea snakes ruled
69.
57 O you whales, and all that move in the waters, bless you the Lord
70.
Bring in 1 or 2 Whales (more about this
71.
• Plus I’ll show you how to hook the Whales (websites with huge customer lists of 50,000 to 500,000 or
72.
With over 125,000 Whales online, you could be big-time financially set for
73.
We also came upon whales, sea otters, and seals along the way
74.
If the plates shifted only slightly, it would alter the electromagnetic field that whales
75.
Whales had been found beached before the Sumatra, Chile, and New
76.
25 For in it be strange and wondrous works, variety of all kinds of beasts and whales created
77.
They sound like whales in the sea communicating with each other
78.
Later on, after the fishing of seals and whales started in their coasts, illness devastated and ruined the Maori population, so that the village Otakau Pa, considerably inhabited in earlier times, could only count about one hundred people by 1848
79.
Then, late in the afternoon, they began the fascinating cruise trip towards the city of Juneau where, it is said, “black bears wander frequently without worry, the salmon clashes against the Eskimo canoes and humpback whales tip over twenty-foot small boats”
80.
During that delightful crossing, travelers may very well observe some fur bearing seals, some bald eagles and, with luck, some whales
81.
21 And God created great whales, and every living creature that moves, which the waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged fowl after his kind: and God saw that it was good
82.
south in a field, and birds and whales appear to use earth’s magnetic
83.
In retrospect, we may have been a bit too adventurous as we have heard of whales tipping over boats
84.
In fact it is illegal to get to within a certain distance of the whales
85.
One day a friend of ours was watching the whales from his motor boat, floating with the engine off
86.
Our kayaks were about half way between his boat and a pod of whales that was putting on quite a performance
87.
Because of the angle and depth of the picture, this photo seemed as if the whale was breeching right over our kayaks, even though we were physically still quite far away from the whales
88.
Beached whales, porpoises caught in fishing nets, mermaids with hangnails—they'd call me to come underwater and help
89.
The fish were all different species; there were whales, sting rays, sharks and marlins
90.
wildlife, whales, dolphins; the list goes on and on
91.
The escape from the service of light and life can only result in those distressing conflicts with the difficult whales of selfishness which lead eventually to darkness and death unless such God-forsaking Jonahs shall turn their hearts, even when in the very depths of despair, to seek after God and his goodness
92.
I knew we were high by the diminutive size of the waves and the occasional leaping whales that I spotted
93.
whales that they may become
94.
seabirds, whales, sharks and dolphins
95.
thousands of dolphins and small whales in an enclosed cove
96.
whales are then laconically beaten to death
97.
have been fascinated by whales for thousands of years
98.
their encounters with beached whales
99.
There are toothed whales (orcas, sperm whales) and non-
100.
The humpback whales are
1.
Archimedes threw himself off the ship and onto a whale that was headed for in the direction of a whaling vessel the pirates had passed earlier
2.
When the whale was caught, Archimedes hopped off the dying whale and joined the crew of whaling humans
3.
whaling vessel intercepted at sea
4.
Yankee merchant or whaling ship venturing on the high seas was
5.
in whaling and ships were the most important men in New
6.
Even as a young boy, he could tell that the wealthy men were whaling men, and they had the power and influence over
7.
age, wanted to become a whaling man and a sea captain
8.
many of the young men wanted to find careers in the whaling
9.
discussions with his parents and friends in the whaling business, Jon shipped on the bark Roman as a greenhand under the
10.
Jon learned a great deal more about sailing and whaling during these two years at sea
11.
view whaling from every angle and every level of the ship
12.
oil-soaked ship afire! This was a task for Jon and his greenhand friends during his first whaling voyage
13.
described above was the essence of the whaling business
14.
During the course of the remaining months on this first whaling
15.
This voyage took the Roman from the Cape of Good Hope to the Indian Ocean for South Sea whaling
16.
terms of profit and also in terms of Jon’s learning the whaling
17.
This first whaling voyage was the stepping stone for Jon to become a master mariner and illustrious skipper
18.
ready to move up the whaling ladder and return to sea again
19.
The boatsteerer was a petty officer and was a key member of the whaling crew
20.
While at sea in the winter months, whaling was done in the
21.
Then, during the summer months, whaling was
22.
major trade center for the whaling business, in terms of both
23.
where whaling was best at that time of year, and then up into the Bering Sea during the summer months
24.
However, at this time these thoughts had to be put on hold, as Jonathan had an exciting offer for his next whaling voyage
25.
doing business with a whaling broker in Honolulu
26.
a whaling captain was considered an aristocrat, and he was tall
27.
He was now assured that he had the toughness to take charge and be successful in future whaling voyages, and he
28.
He was also aware of the fact that many of the whaling captains took their wives with them on the whaling
29.
Hawes enjoyed this part of the whaling business
30.
called her diary, Lady’s Journal of a Whaling Voyage in the
31.
during a whaling voyage
32.
It was, after all, a whaling venture and a business
33.
whaling from the perspective of a woman who was actually there
34.
Jessie began to learn that whaling was not always being lonely at sea,
35.
By this time, Jessie was sure that whaling at sea was not a boring and lonely way of life
36.
This was somewhat typical of whaling
37.
did not have time to dwell on the negatives of whaling
38.
It was a frustrating time for Jessie, but not unusual to have long periods of time without whale sightings for a typical whaling voyage
39.
Morgan, which was also heading for the North Pacific for next summer’s whaling
40.
the North Pacific and the Bering Sea where serious whaling
41.
the Bering Sea for summer whaling in the Arctic Ocean
42.
It was the best time of the year for profitable whaling there
43.
because there were literally hundreds of whaling ships in the
44.
A fast vessel with auxiliary steam power, leaving the meridian of the Cape of Good Hope on the first of January, would reach Sydney in Australia in forty days, adding twenty days for incidental interruptions, and leaving the coast of Australia on the first of March, passing through the whaling ground between New Zealand and New Holland, and the Caroline Group, touching at Ponape, and allowing 30 days for incidental interruptions, would reach the Ladrone Islands by the first of June
45.
She would then, visiting the Bonin Islands, Sea of Japan, Okhotsk Sea and North Pacific, be in position about the 15 of September, north of the Island of Oahu, distance from sixty to one hundred miles, to intercept the North Pacific Whaling fleet, bound to Oahu with the products of the summer cruise
46.
the Sea King earlier in the fall of 1864 with the intention of using her as his weapon to destroy the American whaling fleet in the
47.
Islands, having completed a successful whaling season
48.
would now be in search of winter whaling in the southern Pacific during the cold winter season in the Arctic
49.
On this very same day on the other side of the world, the Milo weighed anchor in the Port of Honolulu for winter whaling off
50.
approached, the Milo would head back to the Bering Sea for the best whaling of all, in terms of productivity and profitability
51.
He knew his objective was the Yankee whaling fleet that
52.
He continued to carry on with the men of the Shenandoah as though this was a social event, or gam, and talked about whaling and life at sea
53.
Whaling was not as good, but it was
54.
terrible year for the whaling fleet
55.
Also lost in that freeze was the ship Roman, which was the first ship that Captain Hawes sailed on to begin his whaling career
56.
Life was never dull on a whaling
57.
they were going to have a very successful whaling venture this
58.
from whaling after this summer and start building a new career
59.
whaling friends from New Bedford and other ports in New
60.
many whaling vessels anchored there
61.
American whaling fleet operations
62.
That was the situation for the Milo as well as all other whaling ships in the northern Pacific at that time
63.
CSS Shenandoah as it homed in toward the American whaling fleet in the northern Pacific Ocean, the Okhotsk Sea, and the
64.
summer of whaling in the Bering Sea
65.
together and requested that Secretary Welles protect whaling
66.
Hawes and all other whaling or merchant masters, knew with
67.
they did not know that the Civil War was actually over, and this was a significant problem for the whaling fleet in the Northern
68.
that the CSS Shenandoah was even in the Pacific Ocean, and certainly, no whaling captain ever expected the Confederates to
69.
Consequently, no whaling captain ever
70.
favorite location for many whaling masters
71.
In fact, by this time, all whaling masters assumed that the war was over after the news had spread to this part of the world of General Lee’s
72.
This was almost becoming a daily routine between these two whaling
73.
This was truly the best whaling spot in the world at this time of year
74.
chronometers as well as being the location for the best whaling
75.
Hawes spent several years as an apprentice in sail making followed by a systematic progression in the whaling
76.
Frank Vera was a whaling master who had immigrated to the United States from the Azores
77.
was also a well-known and respected whaling master of the New
78.
the whaling activity was taking place and he was anxious to
79.
On board with Captain Hawes, Jessie, the children, and the Milo crew were the paroled prisoners from six burned vessels, Abigail, William Thompson, Sophia Thornton, Euphrates, Jireh Swift, and Susan Abigail, along with four whaling masters and one merchant master
80.
Waddell rationalized that he had already performed his mission to destroy the Yankee whaling
81.
Raid on the Whaling Fleet
82.
Full Particulars of the Condition of the Whaling Fleet, etc
83.
Intense excitement was created in this port yesterday morning by the arrival of the whaleship Milo , from the whaling ground in the North Pacific, having on board, in addition to her crew, about one hundred and ninety officers and men of the Pacific whaling fleet, from vessels which had been captured and burned by the rebel pirate Shenandoah
84.
other whaling areas in the Pacific
85.
whaling after the experience with the Shenandoah, and left the Milo in San Francisco for different ways to make a living
86.
northwest of Acapulco, Mexico, that promised good whaling
87.
whaling voyage by spending the next several months off the
88.
coast of Mexico where whaling was best during the winter
89.
anchor in Honolulu and sell off the harvest, adding to the profits of the whaling voyage
90.
beginning to wish for the whaling voyage to end so she and the
91.
in the spring of 1869, regardless of any additional profits from more whaling
92.
However, profits from whaling were enticing
93.
perfect location for whaling during that period in 1868
94.
successful whaling, the Milo set course on a return run to Honolulu to sell off the proceeds stored in the ship’s hold
95.
before the Milo would arrive back in New Bedford, but Jonathan planned that this would his final voyage as a whaling master and Jessie’s final sea voyage as well
96.
literally hundreds of whaling ships out on the oceans of the
97.
The Milo was lucky to be ransomed and to be able to continue in whaling after the summer of 1865
98.
However, it did have a great impact on the whaling cities in New England, particularly New Bedford
99.
The year 1865 was also the beginning of the end of the whaling
100.
As with the whaling industry, the world will