Talk:Tropical bottlenose whale
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[edit]I was reading an article about a strange carcase of a whale found this week in Australia. After reading the article, i came over to wikipedia to see what it offer about the strange whale. Both article agree in that the whole is rare, but wikipedia says there has never been a complete specimen found while the washingtonpost article says a single whole specimen has been found. One has to be wrong factually and i can't figure out which. These are the quotes that contradict each other.
- Wikipedia
"The species has only ever been identified from two skulls. No full-body specimen has ever been found alive or dead anywhere in the world".
- Washingtonpost
"Scientists initially thought the 20-foot female may be a Longman's beaked whale - a species so rare that only one other complete adult specimen has been found in the world." Here is washingtonpost article [1] You need registration, but posting the article here may lead to copyright issues. There is tricks out there to go around the retarded registration. I did check BBC for article about this whale, just to figure out which side to lean on, but it looks like they don't have one yet.
- In fact at least three complete specimens have washed up so far, and this whale is much more documented than the article suggests, so I gave it an overhaul. I have yet to hear anything about a new specimen from Australia, but it wouldn't surprise me, that's where the species was orignally known from after all.Cameron 03:05, 11 November 2005 (UTC)
The Tropical bottlenose whale article is part of the Cetaceans WikiProject. A discussion on the capitalisation of common names of cetaceans is taking place and your input is appreciated. Please see the the project talk page for the full rationale and comments. |