The whale, named Espresso by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), first washed ashore April 25 on Preston Beach in Marblehead. NOAA said they have three options when a dead ...
The humpback whale carcass that had washed ashore in Marblehead more than two weeks ago has ended up on a shore in Swampscott. The whale was identified as the same one by the markings on its body.
The same humpback whale carcass that washed up in Marblehead over two weeks ago has returned to the shores of Swampscott after being towed to sea the first time. The carcass was seen Monday off ...
The humpback whale carcass that washed up in Marblehead in April and again in Swampscott last week has been buried, local outlets reported. The whale, which weighed more than 32 tons and was over ...
Fifty miles wasn't enough to solve the problem of Espresso the whale. But 10 feet looks like it will do the job.
SWAMPSCOTT, MASS. (WHDH) - A dead whale that washed ashore in Swampscott Tuesday was the same whale that previously got stranded on a beach in Marblehead earlier this month, officials said.
The carcass of a 42-foot humpback whale washed up on a beach in Swampscott on Tuesday, less than three weeks after it did the same in Marblehead. The humpback whale was spotted around 9 a.m ...
The carcass of a Humpback Whale landed on Preston Beach in Marblehead last month, and washed up again in Swampscott on Tuesday. For the second time in less than a month on Tuesday, a dead humpback ...
Crews from Station Marblehead and Joint Rescue Coordination Centre Trenton also assisted. Station Marblehead launched a ...
For the second time in less than a month on Tuesday, a dead humpback whale washed up on a beach in the North Shore, landing on Swampscott’s Phillips Beach just weeks after being discovered on ...