When you think about the Cold War, you immediately think about whale songs right? Okay, maybe not everyone makes that connection, but in a delightfully random way, the political rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union in the 1950s had a lot to do with the discovery of the beautiful whale song, and ultimately, the collapse of the commercial whaling industry altogether. 


Back in the 1950s, the United States had gone gangbusters with submarines. Travelling under the Arctic Ocean, they were set on going the longest, the deepest, the hardest. But they were worried about other countries doing it too… particularly the Soviets.  


They knew they couldn’t stop them, but they at least wanted to know where the Red subs were. That’s when Frank Watlington was tasked by the US Navy to develop hydrophones (microphones they could stick in the ocean) to listen for submarine sounds. 


So Watlington set off to Bermuda and got to work. One day he dropped his hydrophone 1,500 feet into the ocean and heard strange, eerie sounds coming from the deep. For the Navy, these sounds were just annoying distractions from detecting the Commies, but for Watlington, well, they were captivating. 


Ditching his original task of detecting Soviet submarines, Watlington became obsessed with the ethereal sounds he had recorded. He played them to anyone who would listen, including at a local square dance (not sure how that went down - the music wasn’t really a polka vibe). Eventually he showed some local fishermen who confirmed to Watlington that these mystical sounds were indeed whale song.


Around the same time, bioacoustics researcher, Roger Payne, had developed an interest in whales. He had once seen a dead porpoise (whale-ish) washed ashore on the coast near Boston and some idiot had chopped off its flukes and stuffed a cigar butt in its blowhole. Disturbed by this inhumane treatment of the wild world, Payne decided he wanted to do something about it. He set off to Bermuda with his wife, Katie, to see the whales and was introduced to Watlington, who played him his whale song recording. 


From the moment he heard the tapes, Payne believed that Watlington held the secret to stopping the massacre of these beautiful creatures. See the whaling industry was really booming at the time. While people might think of whaling as a 19th-century phenomenon (Moby Dick and all that) it was actually far more of a 20th-century thing. In the 1960s, 82,000 whales were being killed every year, 50 times what it was in 1900. And why? Well, mainly for soap, oil and pet food. Yep, let’s massacre the largest animals that have ever lived to feed pets. It was literally a dog’s breakfast.


Payne and his wife were transfixed by the whale sounds. Curious to see if there was a discernible pattern, Katie got spectrograms of the recording and discovered that the sounds weren’t just random. The whales were repeating melodies, rhythms and rhymes, confirming that this giant meat blubber killed for pet food was indeed a highly intelligent being whose captivating song was about to change the world forever.


Roger and Katie published their findings in the scientific journal, “Science”, in 1971 and released a record, Songs of the Humpback Whale. They played it in schools, churches, on TV talk shows, and even at the UN. They sent copies to big-name musicians like The Beatles, Joan Baez and Bob Dylan - and then it went viral. In the initial run, the Humpback Whale record sold 125,000 copies, becoming the biggest nature recording of all time. To this day, it still holds the record of being the largest single pressing in recording history.


But more than that, support to save the whales came with the foundation of Greenpeace in 1972 and in 1986, the International Whaling Commission banned commercial whaling for all species. More recently, researchers have documented that whales not only adopt new songs locally, but transmit them gradually across whole oceans.

 
 
 
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