Key facts
- The largest whale-fall site ever recorded has been discovered in the Indian Ocean.
- Some fossils found at the site date back approximately 5.3 million years.
- The discovery was made by Chinese deep-sea explorers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
- The findings contribute to understanding whale-fall ecosystems and cetacean evolution.
Chinese deep-sea explorers have identified the largest whale-fall site ever recorded in the Indian Ocean, a discovery that significantly advances the understanding of these unique deep-sea ecosystems and their potential as archives for tracing the evolution of whales.
The graveyard, located in the Diamantina Fracture Zone, contains an extensive accumulation of whale fossils, carcasses, and the specialized ecosystems that thrive on them. Some of the fossils have been dated to approximately 5.3 million years ago, making this the deepest and most extensive known site of its kind.
The findings, detailed in the journal Nature, were the result of a study by researchers from the CAS Institute of Deep-Sea Science and Engineering, in collaboration with scientists from the University of Pisa and Earth Sciences New Zealand. The research highlights how whale carcasses, after sinking to the ocean floor, support a unique community of scavengers and decomposers, a phenomenon known as a whale fall.
According to the study, these discoveries reshape the understanding of the geographical distribution and ecological limits of whale-fall ecosystems. They also establish deep-sea floors as crucial fossil archives for studying cetacean evolution over geological timescales.
