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ELA 3: All About Fin Whales 4 Views


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Description:

This video covers all aspects of the fin whale, not to be confused with Finnish whales, which tend to be atheist whales who spend a lot of time in saunas.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

[Dino and Coop singing]

00:12

How did the fin whale get its name? [Fin whale appears]

00:16

And no, its parents didn’t just name it that because the name “Trevor” was going [Two whales with a smaller whale in a pram]

00:18

out of style…

00:19

A fin whale is called a fin whale because…it has a fin near its tail, making it easy to [Coop pointing at a blackboard]

00:24

see in the water. [Woman with a armbands and goggles in the sea]

00:25

Go figure.

00:26

A fin whale is the second largest whale on Earth, next to the blue whale. [Dino pointing at a blackboard]

00:30

And, like their enormous blue friends, they are also baleen whales.

00:33

No chompers on these guys. [The dentist looking annoyed]

00:35

They have long bodies, pointed heads, and thin flukes—making them super speedy swimmers.

00:40

In fact, they can swim up to 17 miles an hour…faster than any other whale.

00:45

Watch out, Michael Phelps. [Whale asking Phelps to race at a swimming pool]

00:46

The fin whale has grooves in its throat that expand when it’s feeding.

00:50

The whales that have these—the fin whale, minke whale, humpback whale, and blue whale—are [Pcitures of the whales]

00:55

also called rorquals.

00:56

That’s the Norwegian word for grooves.

01:00

And…you almost need grooves in your throat to be able to pronounce it… [Man trying to pronounce rorquals]

01:03

Fin whales work in pairs to eat schools of fish. [Whales sat at a table with a school bus full of fish]

01:07

Sounds barbaric, but…hey.

01:08

A whale’s gotta eat.

01:09

Fin whales grow to be about 70 to 90 feet long, and weigh 80 tons.

01:13

They are found in all oceans, but they tend to prefer colder and more temperate waters [Postcard with a fin whale on it]

01:18

to the tropics.

01:20

We are always catching them turning the thermostat down. [Hand bats away whale fin touching the thermostat]

01:23

Fin whales have been recorded more than most other whales because they live in pods and [Man on a boat with a microphone]

01:26

are easily located by their fins.

01:28

The males make the loudest sounds.

01:30

Especially when they drop a hammer on their fin… [Whale doing DIY has an injury from a hammer]

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