A submersible ride revealed a vast whale graveyard. And it holds more than just bones

by | Jun 12, 2026 | Science

Scientists who recently piloted a submersible to a remote spot in the southeastern Indian Ocean have identified one of the largest and deepest whale graveyards containing hundreds of fossils, including one representing a previously unknown species. But not everything in this deep-sea necropolis is dead.Tens of thousands of feet below the surface, dead or dying whales have drifted to the vast graveyard, their bones commingling across an area measuring approximately 746 miles (1,200 kilometers) long. Alongside the oldest bones are modern skeletons, suggesting that whale remains have settled on this spot continuously for at least 5 million years, based on the ages of the fossils, researchers reported Wednesday in the journal Nature.Most of the remains belong to beaked whales, which have skulls that taper into slender snouts like those of dolphins. These whales are deep-diving and spend little time near the surface, so they are rarely seen and very little is known about their habits.AdvertisementAdvertisementResearchers observed some sunken whale cadavers in the graveyard that were recent enough to still have scavengers attached to them; known as whale falls, these carcasses nourish diverse communities of deep-sea life, including bone-eating worms, snails, long-armed brittle stars and bivalves that survive through chemosynthesis — using chemical energy to produce their food. Many of these species may also be new to science, the study authors reported.This 16-foot-long (5-meter-long) Antarctic minke whale carcass on the seafloor of the Diamantina Zone hosts 26 invertebrate species, including brittle stars, bone-eating worms, tubeworms, sea anemones and tiny amphipods. – Global TREnD“Until now, whale falls were mostly based on large cetacean carcasses, mostly baleen whales,” Olivier Lambert, a vertebrate paleontologist at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences in Brussels, told CNN in an email. “Here the authors show that beaked whale carcasses can play a similar role in some specific deep oceanic …

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