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SciencebiologyMarine Biology

Replica of historic whale skeleton installed in Hong Kong.

RA
Rachel Adams
2 hours ago7 min read1 comments
Seventy years after the creature now known as 'Hong Kong’s Whale' made its fateful, lost journey into the human-dominated waters of Victoria Harbour, a poignant echo of its story has returned to the city's coastline. Researchers from the University of Hong Kong’s Swire Institute of Marine Science (SWIMS) have meticulously installed a replica of the whale's skeleton at Cape D’Aguilar in Shek O, the very site where the original fossil stood for decades as a silent monument to marine life, until it was violently destroyed by Super Typhoon Mangkhut in 2018.This act of restoration is far more than a simple public exhibit; it is a profound gesture of ecological memory and a stark reminder of our complex, often damaging, relationship with the ocean's giants. The original whale, a fin whale whose 1955 arrival captivated a then less-developed Hong Kong, represented a rare and direct connection to the vast marine ecosystems just beyond the urban sprawl.Its skeleton, preserved and displayed, served as a generations-long touchstone for local marine education, a tangible link to a natural world that can feel distant in a metropolis of concrete and steel. Its destruction by Mangkhut was a brutal lesson in the escalating power of climate-change-fueled weather events, a force of nature obliterating a relic of nature.The new replica, crafted by a specialist firm in mainland China, thus carries a heavy symbolic burden. It must now stand as both a memorial to the original whale and a resilient sentinel against the very climatic forces that erased its predecessor.For the scientists at SWIMS, this is a core part of their public service mission, bridging the gap between rigorous academic research and community engagement. It prompts critical reflection on the health of our local waters and the pressures—from shipping traffic and pollution to acoustic disturbance—that continue to threaten marine mammals in the South China Sea.The re-installation asks us to consider what we have learned in the seventy years since that lone whale wandered astray. Have we become better stewards, or have the threats only intensified? This skeleton is not just a display; it is a question posed in bone, challenging every visitor to look past the steel and glass of the city and remember the fragile, magnificent life that persists in the blue depths just offshore, and what we stand to lose if we do not act to protect it.
#featured
#Hong Kong
#whale fossil
#replica
#Shek O
#marine science
#typhoon
#conservation

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