Cruise ship docks with dead whale on bow
Necropsy will be performed on what looks like endangered humpback
Video: Environment |
Future Earth 2025: What’s coming? Mega forest fires rage across continents, swarms of locusts devour crops and cause famines, while floods engulf whole countries. This is no fantasy--it's the future we could face unless we do something to stop wasting our most precious commodity: water. Watch "Future Earth 2025" on MSNBC on Sunday, Dec. 20, at 10 pm ET. |
NBC Universal's Green Week |
View gallery of reader experiences submitted last week as part of NBC's Green Week |
Environment slide shows |
Climate by the numbers View some of the hundreds of protests around the world on Oct. 24 to demand lower CO2 emissions. |
![]() |
Breaking news alerts (about 1 per day) |
Find more alerts at alerts.msnbc.com |
Related stories |
ANCHORAGE, Alaska - A cruise ship pulled into its Alaskan port with a 25- to 30-foot dead whale pinned to its bow.
Federal officials investigating the incident said it did not appear the ship’s operators did anything wrong.
The crew of the 2,000-passenger ship Summit said they were surprised to discover they had hit a whale somewhere after leaving Disenchantment Bay near Yakutat. They felt no bump during their voyage, said a spokesman for Celebrity Cruises, which owns the ship.
The whale was spotted by longshoremen at the Seward dock.
It was tentatively identified as a humpback, an endangered species, and towed by a tugboat Saturday afternoon to a nearby beach. A necropsy has been scheduled to help determine whether the whale was alive or dead when it was struck.
The whale was on the bulbous bow that protrudes from the ship’s hull below the waterline, said Scott Adams, an enforcement officer with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
“We have no knowledge if it struck this vessel or another vessel or just died of some genetic issue,” Adams said. “It doesn’t look like the result of any predatory attack.”
At least two humpbacks have been struck and killed by tour boats in Glacier Bay National Park in the past decade, said Barbara Mahoney, a marine mammal specialist with the National Marine Fisheries Service.
A boat crew that is not pursuing or harassing whales, and that reports any accident, is not likely to suffer repercussions, federal officials said.
“These boats are big enough that they don’t even feel a bump,” Mahoney said.
The Summit is the length of three football fields.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM ENVIRONMENT |
| Add Environment headlines to your news reader: |
Boost your career with an online Degree. Pick from Leading Colleges!
www.EarnMyDegree.com
Sponsored links
Resource guide


