Article 6C7FM Almost 60 years after the discovery of whale song, their haunting sounds reveal new secrets

Almost 60 years after the discovery of whale song, their haunting sounds reveal new secrets

by
Sophy Grimshaw
from on (#6C7FM)

In 1967, Roger Payne, who has died at 88, noticed that the mammals' calls were organised in repeating patterns, spurring the discovery of whale song

The idea that whales sing", commonly accepted today, is relatively recent. Until the late 1960s it was thought that whale noises were nothing more than expressive sounds or calls. But in 1967, a discovery by the marine biologist Roger Payne, who died last Saturday, changed our understanding - ushering in a new way of looking at the world's largest mammals.

As the young Payne listened on repeat for days to recordings made of humpback sounds captured underwater off the coast of Bermuda, he noticed the calls were organised in repeating patterns. Speaking to Guardian Seascape in 2020, he described it as his wow" moment, spurring on the discovery - made alongside other researchers - that all whale species sing" in some rhythmic form, even in the clicks" of toothed whales, such as sperm whales.

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