Why Do Dead Whales Explode? - The Verge
Maybe your like
- The VergeThe Verge logo.
- Tech
- Reviews
- Science
- Entertainment
- AI
- Shopping
- Hamburger Navigation Button
- Login / Sign Up
- TechExpand
- Amazon
- Apple
- Microsoft
- Samsung
- Business
- See all tech
- GadgetsExpand
- Laptops
- Phones
- TVs
- Headphones
- Speakers
- Wearables
- See all gadgets
- ReviewsExpand
- Smart Home Reviews
- Phone Reviews
- Tablet Reviews
- Headphone Reviews
- See all reviews
- AIExpand
- OpenAI
- Anthropic
- See all AI
- Verge ShoppingExpand
- Buying Guides
- Deals
- Gift Guides
- See all shopping
- PolicyExpand
- Antitrust
- Politics
- Law
- Security
- See all policy
- ScienceExpand
- Space
- Energy
- Environment
- Health
- See all science
- EntertainmentExpand
- TV Shows
- Movies
- Audio
- See all entertainment
- GamingExpand
- Xbox
- PlayStation
- Nintendo
- See all gaming
- StreamingExpand
- Disney
- HBO
- Netflix
- YouTube
- Creators
- See all streaming
- TransportationExpand
- Electric Cars
- Autonomous Cars
- Ride-sharing
- Scooters
- See all transportation
- Features
- Verge VideoExpand
- TikTok
- YouTube
- PodcastsExpand
- Decoder
- The Vergecast
- Version History
- NewslettersExpand
- The Verge Daily
- Installer
- Verge Deals
- Notepad
- Optimizer
- Regulator
- The Stepback
- Archives
- Store
- Threads
- Youtube
- RSS
- ReportClose
Report
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
FollowFollowSee All Report
- ScienceClose
Science
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
FollowFollowSee All Science
The processes going on inside the carcass in Newfoundland are actually pretty typical
The processes going on inside the carcass in Newfoundland are actually pretty typical
by Close
Arielle Duhaime-Ross
Reporter, The VergeLast published Jun 25, 2016Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
FollowFollowSee All by Arielle Duhaime-Ross
May 2, 2014, 3:30 PM UTC- Link
- Share


A dead blue whale washed up on the shore of an eastern Canadian town several weeks ago, and has been causing quite a stir ever since. Locals tell the media they're worried the bloated, smelly carcass will explode, and what's worse is that their fears aren't unfounded, as "whale explosions" have happened before. But the most interesting part of this story isn't that this rare event is taking place before our eyes, but rather that we don't hear about potentially explosive dead marine mammals more often. After all, the decomposition stages that this carcass is currently demonstrating are pretty typical.
"release is sometimes slow, and sometimes catastrophic."
“Pressure release is sometimes slow, and sometimes catastrophic,” says Bruce Mate, director of the marine biology institute at Oregon State University. Mate has dealt with a lot of dead whales throughout his career, so he’s also seen his fair share of bloated remains. “The gas buildup is just a normal part of the degradation of tissue.” That’s why he isn’t all that worried about the whale that washed up on the beach at Trout River, in Newfoundland. “Dead animals buoy up to the surface all the time, and they float there until the pressure is released through some weak point,” he says. The weak points are often ones that are already in place, such as a whale’s mouth or anus. But hungry sharks can also contribute to the creation of these sorts of weak points.
But why does gas build up in these whales in the first place? Wolfgang Weinmann, a forensic toxicologist at the University of Bern in Switzerland, explained in an email to The Verge that the gases that build up in dead animals “come from different sources.” In this situation, he said, putrefaction and fermentation are likely the culprits. During putrefaction the proteins in an animal’s tissues break down. This produces a number of “stinky gases,” Weinmann wrote, in addition to methane. It’s also what causes organ liquefaction. Fermentation, on the other hand, is the process in which various tissues dry out. This produces a number of other gases, such as carbon dioxide. So when putrefaction and fermentation come together, you can sometimes end up with a spectacularly bloated carcass. And because whales have a thick layer of blubber beneath their skin, air trapped within stays mainly in the whale until its skin degrades — or until someone decides it’s time to relieve all that pressure.
Spectacular because of its size
As for the impressive nature of these explosions, it really just has to do with size, Mate says. Because decomposition is taking place in such a large animal, more gas and pressure can build up inside its remains. “You don’t get this type of exciting or dramatic response when you are looking at a squirrel roadkill or a raccoon along the road,” he says. “But the same process is going on in the squirrel, it’s just at a much smaller scale.” And make no mistake, Mate says, the pressure building up inside this animal “will release itself eventually” — it just might not be the sort of explosion we’re imagining. Slow deflations, he says, work just as well.
Even so, the town should hire a boat to drag the carcasses out to sea, just in case, Mate says. Once sufficiently far away from the town, someone can perform a controlled release of the whales’ internal pressure by making a shallow slit with a long-handled knife. “In my experience,” he says, “you don’t have to go down all the way to where the pressure is — just create a weakness and walk away.”
organs "propelled out 30, 50 feet."
But Mate admits that even a controlled release can be botched. If someone were to go in too deep, then the release could be “catastrophic,” he says. “There have been people who have stood on top of these animals and have been blown into the air.” When this happens, a whale’s internal organs are “sometimes propelled out 30, 50 feet.” If the release is done correctly, however, the carcass would slowly deflate and sink to the bottom, providing tons of food to the animals below.
Unfortunately, this idea probably won’t sit well with some of the town’s inhabitants, as many are hoping to preserve and exhibit the whale skeleton as a tourist attraction. This could still happen, but an announcement from the Royal Ontario Museum yesterday, in which the Museum said it would send researchers to recover two of the nine whale carcasses that have recently washed up in the area, might foil these plans. Already, locals have expressed displeasure with the idea of parting with the bloated blue whale. “It’s not going to be no small feat to move this to Ontario,” Jenny Parsons, a restaurant operator in Trout River, told CBC Radio’s As It Happens. Ideally, Parsons would like to see the whale removed from the community while it decomposes, and then returned once the skeleton is clean. That, she said, makes more sense than moving the whole thing to Toronto.
Mate thinks keeping the skeleton is feasible — he has done just that several times — but also says that making that happen is expensive and complicated. The team that will prepare the skeleton will need to remove all the soft tissue, meaning about 85 percent of the whale’s mass. Then, they’ll have to figure out how to dispose of the flesh, which won’t be easy. “You don’t just put something like that casually in the back of your pickup, and drive it out to some rural area,” he says. But if they really want to keep the skeleton, they can — “it’s just a really big project.”
Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.- ReportClose
Report
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
FollowFollowSee All Report
- ScienceClose
Science
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
FollowFollowSee All Science
Most Popular
Most Popular- GameSir put a tiny force feedback steering wheel on its new Swift Drive controller
- The Canon EOS R6 Mark III is great, but this lens is amazing
- Killing in the name of… nothing
- Anker’s portable backup battery is an even better investment now that it’s nearly half off
- Scientists rename human genes to stop Microsoft Excel from misreading them as dates
The Verge Daily
A free daily digest of the news that matters most.
Email (required)Sign UpBy submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Advertiser Content FromThis is the title for the native ad
More in Report
Free speech’s great leap backwards
The best shows to watch on HBO Max from 2025
The best PS5 games from 2025
8 great games for your Steam Deck from 2025
The 10 best shows to stream on Amazon Prime Video from 2025
I re-created Google’s cute Gemini ad with my own kid’s stuffie, and I wish I hadn’t
Free speech’s great leap backwardsFelipe De La HozDec 30
The best shows to watch on HBO Max from 2025Charles Pulliam-MooreDec 29
The best PS5 games from 2025Ash ParrishDec 28
8 great games for your Steam Deck from 2025Jay PetersDec 27
The 10 best shows to stream on Amazon Prime Video from 2025Emma RothDec 26
I re-created Google’s cute Gemini ad with my own kid’s stuffie, and I wish I hadn’tAllison JohnsonDec 25Advertiser Content FromThis is the title for the native ad
Top Stories
1:30 PM UTCThe year politics became brainrot3:00 PM UTCNet neutrality was back, until it wasn’tDec 30The Canon EOS R6 Mark III is great, but this lens is amazingDec 30This smart garden turned my black thumb greenDec 30LG is announcing its own Frame-style TV at CESDec 17The Verge’s 2025 in reviewTag » Why Did A Whale Explode
-
Exploding Whale - Wikipedia
-
Why Does A Decomposing Whale Explode? - National Geographic
-
Why Do Whales Explode When They Die? - The Sun
-
The Dr Binocs Show - Why Do Dead Whales Explode? - YouTube
-
Why Do Whales Explode? | WIRED UK
-
Here's Why Whales Literally Explode After They Die - Distractify
-
Can Whales Really Explode? - Let's Talk Science
-
Why Do Whales Burst When They Die? - Quora
-
Florence Whale Explosion - The Oregon Encyclopedia
-
Fifty Years Ago, Oregon Exploded A Whale With A Half-ton Of Dynamite
-
Why Do Dead Whales Explode? Experts Warn People To Run If They ...
-
Why Do Whales Explode? Facts And Myths Debunked For Kids
-
Why Do Whales Explode? (Everything You Need To Know)