A fin whale swimming off the coast of the Azores in the Atlantic Ocean Wildestanimal/Alamy
Fin whale songs, one of the loudest animal calls in the ocean, can be used to learn about the structure of Earth鈥檚 crust.
V谩clav Kuna at the Institute of Geophysics of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague and his colleague John N谩b臅lek at Oregon State University thought of the idea while they were recording seismic activity from earthquakes off the coast of Oregon.
鈥淚 was processing the data and found that there were some signals recorded which I didn鈥檛 recognise,鈥 says Kuna. The mystery was solved when he realised the stations were recording songs produced by fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus).
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Between 2012 and 2013, the researchers deployed 54 ocean-bottom seismometer (OBS) stations to record seismic activity. Four stations recorded six fin whale songs 鈥 patterns of repeated vocalisation 鈥 that ranged from 2.5 to nearly 5 hours long.
鈥淭he calls travel through the water and penetrate into the ground,鈥 says Kuna. 鈥淭hey then bounce off the layers within the oceanic crust and come back to the surface where we record them at OBS stations.鈥
If you know the distance between the whale and station, which can be worked out from the frequency of the sound waves, you can measure the returning sound waves and determine the make-up and the thickness of Earth鈥檚 crust as they refract and reflect through different layers.
The researchers tested this on the seafloor surrounding the OBS stations and found that the whale songs could show the thickness of the top sediment layers. Their results matched thickness values previously observed by geologists for layers of the same crustal age.
Seismic airguns are conventionally used in a similar way to study Earth鈥檚 oceanic crust. These create one of the loudest human-made sounds in the ocean by releasing loud blasts of pressurised air, which can distress animals like whales and disrupt their vocalisations. 鈥淎irguns produce noise pollution in the ocean. It鈥檚 very expensive and it is not environmentally friendly,鈥 says Kuna.
Although whale songs aren’t as effective as airguns, they could be used to complement existing methods. Airguns emit a broader range of frequencies that can model Earth鈥檚 oceanic crust at a higher resolution than the whale songs, but there is potential to use the songs of other whales, such as sperm whales, which have a broader frequency range.
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