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Why Did Pilot Whales Beach at Golden Bay, New Zealand on 15 Nov. 2012?

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5.9 MAG. EARTHQUAKE SOUTH OF TASMANIA ON 18 SEPTEMBER 2012 CAUSES BEACHING AT GOLDEN BAY NEW ZEALAND ON 15 NOVEMBER 2012  Notice all the flotsam washed in with the whales in the above beachings.  This is evidence that the whales were not navigating when they went ashore.  They were washed into the beach by the flow of the incoming surface currents. The epicenter of the quake was located in the lower left hand corner of the chart. The surface currents were washing due east at first.  The whales would have been shifted northern side of this flow by the Coriolis affect. The surface currents then swung to the north.  The non-navigating pod were carried north and around the southern tip South Island and then north along the western shore to the northern tip of South Island where they were finally washed into the the sand by a strong shoreward flow. These whales were at sea for 27 days without food and water; they were dehydrated, exhausted, and near death when they went

Seaquake Causes 2 Pods to Beach at King Island

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ALMOST 100 whales and dolphins died in two mass strandings near King Island.   On Friday morning locals found 13 dolphins beached at Quarantine Bay on the island's north-west coast, while on nearby New Year Island a stranding of about 67 pilot whales and 20 dolphins went undiscovered until yesterday. http://www.themercury.com.au/article/2012/11/04/365299_most-popular-stories.html On 18 October, 15 days prior to the beaching, a magnitude 5.9 earthquake occurred in the seabed 1298km south of Hobart Tasmania at 54.32 S ; 143.99 E.  The quake was very shallow at 10km below the ocean's surface. www.emsc-csem.org/Earthquake/earthquake.php?id=289074  The epicenter of the quake was situated at the bottom and to the left of the center of the above chart.  The seabed danced about when the quake hit.  This dancing acted like a powerful piston pushing and pulling against the water column, generating waves of intense pressure changes that swept over the the pod of p

40 PILOT WHALES BEACH ON NORTH ANDAMAN ISLAND

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STRANDING CAUSED BY UNDERSEA EARTHQUAKE SOUTH OF NICOBAR ISLAND October, 2012:  Forty pilot whales beached themselves on the 21st of October. They died in the sand inside Elizabeth Bay on North Andaman Island on the western banks of the Andaman Sea. This is the first time that such a large number of whales beached in the area.   On 29 September, a magnitude 5.3 earthquake occurred South of Nicobar Island at 6.180N;92.764E. The quake was listed at 14km deep +/- 12km and well within the whale-dangerous zone. Since whales injured by rapid and excessive changes in ambient water pressure lose their ability to navigated immediately after the injury, their swim path is always downstream and under direct control of the surface currents. This means there must be clear evidence that the source of the barotraumatic injury is indeed upstream from the beaching site, and that the distance traveled downstream corresponds with the speed of the current and the swim speed of th