KILLER WHALES

...and God said to the great whales;
"You are good but the sins of man are many.
Lo! I will surround you with a blanket of deep waters
away from the sins of man.
Go now, to the peace of the plankton sea."

And so they lived a million years in the peace of the plankton sea,
Dreaming a dream of a million years in the peace of plankton sea.
And in that dream an agony, of lonely tides and empty sea.

God saw that they were lonely in the garden in the sea
He sighed and turned, again men came.
Steel ships upon the sea.


EVOLUTION

Fifty million or so years ago a social wolf-like animal with hooves like the horse, soon to become the predecessor of modern whales and dolphins, diverged from the mammals of the land, including the little pre-ape that was to become man, and re-entered the sea. Today the killer whale, the largest of the dolphins, enjoys an occasional bite out of the flesh of his not-so-distant cousins the whale.

ANTHROMORPHIC PATTERNS

Today killer whales are, like man, grouped into three distinct races.

(A) Residents: these killer whales tend to live in the most stable groups, thirty or so, and their movements coincide with fish migrations, and they seldom stay under water more than three or four minutes at a time. They speak a different dialect of killer whalesse than the other two races and no calls are shared by the other two types.

(B) Transits: Transits are somewhat like maurading vikings, hugging the shore line as they travel, opportunely pillaging, and sometime harrassing sea birds which they seldom eat. Their vocalizations are by killer whale standards, primitive. But when they do vocalize they seem to have the same basic dialect. Maybe this is because they have a very fluid social structure, so unique dialects have little chance to evolve.

(C) Offshore: Offshore groups are mostly distinguable by their behavior but subtle differences exist, such as the shape of the tip of the dorsal fin. They apear to be smaller than the other two races and do not appear to mix.
They feed mostly on fish and little is known of what they speak.

FROM KILLER WHALES BBC MARK CARWARDINE