Tag Archives: Wildlife

Whales in Lake Champlain?

The Charlotte Whale

In August 1849, a work-crew digging a railroad bed in Charlotte, Vermont unearthed a skull and a batch of bones that were first thought to be the remains of an ox or horse, or some other large familiar creature. Indeed it was a large creature… a whale – discovered in 8 feet of clay a mile from the shore of freshwater Lake Champlain.

whales in Lake Champlain?

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The bones were turned over to a Vermont natural scientist named Zadock Thompson, who with help from Harvard University, identified the skeleton as a 14-foot, 11,000-year-old beluga whale, an important discovery that confirmed evidence that ocean waters had once covered the area.

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UVM Perkins’ Museum

whales in Lake Champlain

The whale skeleton, later reconstructed with wires by Thompson, is now housed in a glass display case for all to see at the UVM Perkins Geology Museum. The whale and a helpful inscription tell about continental glaciers, changing climates, and evolving sea and land formations. A visitor can’t help but imagine the puzzlement of the laborers when they uncovered the whale, the excitement of Thompson as he pieced together the skeletal puzzle, and more to the point: how dramatically the landscape and flora and fauna of the region have changed over 11,000 years.

What can we learn from the Charlotte whale? That some 24,000 years ago a continental glacier covered the area with ice a mile deep. As the earth’s climate warmed, the glacier receded north, and that roughly 13,000 years ago the ice had disappeared enough to allow ocean water to flow into the region. That sometime during that period the whale died and ocean waters began receding, eventually disappearing, as the once glacier-depressed land mass rose.

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Modern Day Vermont Whales

Modern day whales in Vermont are limited to the Charlotte whale’s skeleton and the Whale Tails sculpture alongside the northbound lanes of Interstate 89 in South Burlington. Click here to learn about the Whale Tails sculpture.

 

whales in Lake Champlain

Whale Tails alongside I-89 in South Burlington, VT

 

The Charlotte Whale can be seen at:

Perkins Geology Museum, Delehanty Hall, University of Vermont, 180 Colchester Ave., Burlington, VT 05401, 802-656-8694    www.uvm.edu/perkins/   Mon-Fri 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Admission free.

Rock, minerals, fossils, dinosaur bones and an 11,000-year-old whale skeleton!

More About This:

Lake Champlain Geology

Whale Tails in Vermont Field

Charlotte Whale

The Vermont State Fossil

Charlotte, The Vermont Whale

 

Tundra Swans Visit Lake Champlain Area

Tundra Swans on Lake Champlain

Three tundra swans from the arctic tundra have taken up temporary residence in Lake Champlain and are drawing area bird-watching enthusiasts to the open water near Ausable Point State Park in New York. The birds that normally winter in the Carolinas have been seen for the past few weeks and are probably staying on Lake Champlain because of the mild winter and open water.

About Tundra Swans

Tundra swans are a bit smaller than the more common mute swan. An adult tundra swan will weigh in around 20 pounds, but are still a very impressive bird with a 6-foot wingspan.Tundra swans are much less accustomed to humans than other species, such as mute and trumpeter swans, and tend to shy away from a crowd.

 

Tundra Swans

 

Lake Sturgeon Thunder

Lake Sturgeon

One of the many interesting creatures inhabiting Lake Champlain is the lake sturgeoLake Sturgeon Thundern. It is one of the largest freshwater fish. Mature adults average between three and five feet in length and weigh from ten to eighty pounds, but can sometimes measure over seven feet long and weigh over 300 pounds.

The lake sturgeon has a torpedo-shaped body, covered with five rows of bony plates: one row on top and two rows on each side. The lake sturgeon has a sharp, cone-shaped snout with four smooth barbels on its underside.

People near water inhabited by sturgeon have reported mysterious sounds and vibrations, apparently caused by the sturgeon. Native-Americans in the Fox and Wolf River watersheds of Wisconsin have long associated this “thunder” with sturgeon spawning runs in the spring .

Here’s an interesting article from the University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Program about ‘sturgeon thunder’: Sturgeon “Thunder” Has Roots in Biological Process… (Read More) .….

Lake Champlain Wildlife

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Lake Champlain WildlifeLake Champlain Creatures

 

 

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