Gruseome history: The blast happened on the Danish Faroe Islands, which
have a long history of whaling which has been called barbaric by animal
rights activists. This whale's skeleton will be used in a museum
It is a job no man would envy.
An unlucky biologist has been filmed
trying to cut open a whale carcass - which exploded all over him.
The sperm whale was one of two which
died this week after being beached in the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic,
captured on camera by the Faroese Broadcasting Corporation.
A job that takes guts: Bjarni Mikkelsen tried to cut open a sperm whale carcass which exploded in his face
Gruesome: By the time the worker on the Faroe Islands turned round to escape, it was too late
The creatures died after becoming
trapped in a narrow channel, and residents of the 50,000-strong Danish
community wanted to use the skeleton of one for a museum.
So it fell to unlucky Bjarni
Mikkelsen, a marine biologist at the National Museum of the Faroe Islands, to
cut open the carcass yesterday.
He had never cut open a whale before
so he approached the pungent 45ft corpse gingerly.
As soon as he began working, the gas
trapped inside exploded, spewing tons of organs and guts into the air.
The main part of the huge blast just
missed him.
He told MailOnline: 'The animal was
more than two days old when we took it so we knew there would be some pressure
on the inside, but nothing like what happened.
Easy does it: Marine biologist Bjarni Mikkelsen approaches the 45ft whale with an extra-long sharp knife
There she blows: Without warning a trapped pocket of gas in the carcass bursts, ripping the corpse open
Within a fraction of a second the whale's insides burst out from the carcass, showering the biologist
Organs: Mr Mikkelsen stands apparently stunned as the whale's insides fly into the air in front of him
Shock: The whale's insides were flung for several yards across the beach in the Faroe Islands, North Atlantic
As the split-second explosion subsides the biologist begins to react and starts running away from the scene
Not a whale of a time: The unfortunate worker spins on his heels as the worst of the explosion finishes
Tough work: Thankfully Bjarni Mikkelsen wore red overalls. The whale was one of two which became trapped
Tragic: The carcass still emitting gas. The whale had become trapped and was too heavy for locals to help
'We couldn't imagine it would happen like that so it was a little bit more
of a surprise.
'It wasn't a shock. We had expected
something. In the situation I was more worried about something worse happening
or anyone getting hurt.
'We were cutting along the dorsal
part of the animal so when it exploded it did so in a very controlled way.
'It was very loud, I suppose. It's
something everyone here is talking about.'
Footage of the incident, which
happened at 2pm yesterday, has already been seen on YouTube more than 300,000
times.
The islands are 200 miles north of
Scotland but have been under the banner of Denmark for 200 years, after
previously being ruled by Norway.
People on the Faroe Islands have
been hunting pilot whales for centuries, but the practice has been condemned as
cruel and unnecessary by animal rights groups.
Despite the gory incident, the
locals are still determined to put the skeleton in their museum as a reminder
of their culture, and they are already busy cutting up the remains of the
carcass.
The whale's flesh will be thrown
away.
Remote: A map showing the location of the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic
Lying 200 miles north of Scotland, the Faroe Islands have 50,000 people
but 700 miles of coastline and some of the highest sea cliffs in the
world. Sperm whales dive deeper than any other great whale and swim far
north
HOW GAS BUILDS IN DEAD ANIMALS
When an animal dies, bacteria inside
the carcass produce methane as part of the decomposition process.
If this is not let out of the body
gradually it builds up, exploding at the first opportunity.
Whales are the most extreme because
their huge size makes the consequences of a gas build-up so much greater.
Living toads in Hamburg, Germany,
started spontaneously combusting in 2005. It was thought crows were picking out
their livers, leaving a hole, so when the toads puffed themselves up as a
defence mechanism, their whole bodies burst.
And Royal funeral attendants
hurriedly drilled a hole in the coffin of the overweight English king George IV
to let out gases - after an apparent botched embalming job.
- Dailymail
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