Sperm Whales Clicking You Inside Out - James Nestor at The Interval

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 25. 04. 2017
  • If you enjoy this excerpt, watch the FULL VIDEO: theinterval.org/salon-talks/0... or subscribe to our podcast itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/l...
    Sounds from another world. Underwater footage and awe-inspiring first-hand accounts of divers who are swimming with sperm whales that are trying to communicate. From author James Nestor's 02014 talk at The Interval at Long Now.
    "Humanity and the Deep Ocean" from October 02014, one in an ongoing series of long-term thinking lectures: Conversations at The Interval in San Francisco.
    Thanks to the generous support of the Elkes Foundation, Long Now is publishing videos of these talks for the first time. Look for more short, shareable clips of Interval talks released here weekly.
    The Long Now Foundation is a non-profit located in San Francisco that is dedicated to fostering long-term thinking and responsibility. Find out more at longnow.org
    James Nestor's book "Deep": www.amazon.com/Deep-Freedivin...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 794

  • @MrJamesLongstreet
    @MrJamesLongstreet Před 6 lety +16277

    I like land. Land is good.

  • @milldinho
    @milldinho Před 4 lety +14727

    I met a whale once it was great, we clicked

  • @Prog4Prog
    @Prog4Prog Před 5 lety +22018

    This is literally click bait

  • @kunheecho280
    @kunheecho280 Před 6 lety +7947

    btw....180decibels is how loud a rocket launch is...holy crap

    • @notpulverman9660
      @notpulverman9660 Před 6 lety +801

      200decibels is 6 to 7 times louder than 180decibels!!
      Decibels measure a doubling of noise as an increase of 3 units!

    • @notpulverman9660
      @notpulverman9660 Před 6 lety +600

      They're loud as fuck!
      And for those of us who don't know, a gunshot is only 140 decibels!

  • @Hollyclown
    @Hollyclown Před 5 lety +17422

    Whale: “hello friend”
    Human: “OH MY GOD! EXISTENCE IS PAIN!”

  • @notpulverman9660
    @notpulverman9660 Před 6 lety +13470

    Sperm whale clicking (200dB).
    Space shuttle launch (180dB).
    Pistol gunshot (140dB).
    Fighter jet take off (130 dB).
    Commercial airliner (118 dB).
    Nail gun(110 dB).
    Rock concert(105 - 114 dB).
    Every 3 decibels means the sound has doubled, since dB are logarithmic units.

    • @masuz3972
      @masuz3972 Před 3 měsíci +14

      Go up 10 decibels => Intensity of sound has doubled
      Go down 10 decibels => It's halved
      Also did you know that the unit is actually called a bel, and desibel just means tenth of a bel?

    • @dngartistry8272
      @dngartistry8272 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Fuck it, 5 years later lol... as someone who has experienced 130db regularly for 2 years (US navy flight deck), I couldn't even imagine. What would it even take to be able to withstand having a convo with these things?

    • @craven5328
      @craven5328 Před měsícem +1

      Jesus! Fascinating, thanks!

  • @yesterday4893
    @yesterday4893 Před 6 lety +6060

    whales must be protected always!

  • @bryanjensen2614
    @bryanjensen2614 Před 6 lety +3663

    I've been on two trips snorkeling/free diving with sperm whales and believe me this guy isn't kidding...even at a distance you can feel the clicks going through your body I felt like my chest was being used as a giant door knocker

  • @pearvar77
    @pearvar77 Před 6 lety +3170

    Do not forget that for a time they were hunted almost to extinction. And currently they are still threatened.

  • @dudethmcgraff7627
    @dudethmcgraff7627 Před 6 lety +13182

    If you’re looking for intelligent life, forget mars. Just look in the ocean.

  • @Christin5554
    @Christin5554 Před 6 lety +6239

    this was way too short, it was that interesting. Thank you for the video and the interesting info.

    • @longnow
      @longnow  Před 6 lety +842

      Hi, thanks for watching! You can watch the full video of James' talk on our site. He covers a lot of other areas. It's fascinating work: theinterval.org/salon-talks/02014/oct/07/humanity-and-deep-ocean

  • @the_arm_bar
    @the_arm_bar Před 6 lety +5172

    I thought sperm whales where just basic whales. Never knew they had a superpower.

  • @warrenlightning8137
    @warrenlightning8137 Před 5 lety +17845

    To bad they can't destroy whaling ships with their clicks.

  • @spike4850
    @spike4850 Před 6 lety +3920

    People are overestimating them - they’re just beatboxing

  • @9999plato
    @9999plato Před 6 lety +2794

    All true. I used to be a Navy Sonar Tech and I know that the Sonar can injure or possibly kill if a diver is in close proximity. It makes sense that a powerful whales click could do the same.

    • @user-vi3tb3bw5t
      @user-vi3tb3bw5t Před 5 lety +446

      Sonar also can confuse and kill whales and other creatures that pick up on it.

  • @df7201
    @df7201 Před 5 lety +2180

    I wonder if our talking blows out ants' eardrums

  • @jackharpe3rd233
    @jackharpe3rd233 Před 6 lety +3139

    I hear that when they learn (and they can learn) that you're sensitive to their clicks they'll potentially quiet themselves down so they'll let you interact with them.

  • @branni6538
    @branni6538 Před 6 lety +7210

    The fact they allow you in the water and come spend time with you is an honor. Totally awesome! The world is such an amazing place full of such beauty and amazing creatures.

  • @WifeBTR123
    @WifeBTR123 Před 6 lety +5401

    The stuff about their brains, makes it that much more horrific thinking about the terrors man has inflicted over the years with commercial whaling. :(
    Getting killed slowly and knowing it...

  • @SupesMe
    @SupesMe Před 6 lety +4450

    I saw a thing on PBS a few years ago where a Diver was in the water with a Baby Sperm Whale (It was about 6 feet long) and it was clicking away at him trying to figure out what he was and he could feel himself being thumped in the chest. Then the Mom raced up from the Depths and the little Whale said "Gotta Go" and raced over to her. I bet a full grown one could fry you accidentally. Some researchers think they Fry Giant Squids with the clicks

  • @xI777Ix
    @xI777Ix Před 5 lety +4346

    This guy is a good lector. He has clear, smooth speech without dead space between fragments. Albeit short, his information was on point. In addition, unlike most modern lectors he is not desperately trying to trow in some random jokes to get giggles out of the audience.

  • @ravendevino6419
    @ravendevino6419 Před 6 lety +5788

    Whale: HI HUMAN
    Diver: Oh my god! Too loud!
    Whale: *at the same volume* hi human

  • @deaththekid6614
    @deaththekid6614 Před 5 lety +794

    Props to the guys who risked their eardrums and lives for science!

  • @R0BL0W
    @R0BL0W Před 6 lety +567

    In six minutes my whole understanding of us, the world, and our place in it has changed so much

  • @derekwall200
    @derekwall200 Před 6 lety +1496

    calls get as loud as 236 decibels underwater? that is enough to stun or kill a person

  • @lindt393
    @lindt393 Před 6 lety +3240

    This stuff is why I'm majoring in marine biology. This is the kind of research I want to do. What if we could create a functional two-way communication with another species in its language? That's never been done before. Sure, we've taught apes sign language and parrots english (and of course other languages, but english is the one that most studies are done in) but those are by and large human languages which are specified to human anatomy and cognition. But cetaceans are seperated from us by over 200 million years of evolution, their brain structures are completely different, they are aquatic, their primary imaging sense is hearing, they percieve and conceptualize the world completely differently from us! We know they have comparable intelligence to us (though it's impossible to make a direct comparison because any tests we can come up with will automatically be skewed by our own limitations and bias, like...we can't even come up with a reliable and accurate comprehensive intelligence metric within our own species that isn't skewed towards a certian demographic and societally constructed ideal of what 'counts' as intelligence but i digress) and we know they have a language and their social structures are similar to ours. We're similar enough that we can relate to one another but different enough that we can each gain entirely novel insights into things we had never even concieved of. For as long as humanity hasbeen around we've dreamed about first contact with another sentient life form (first as spirits and dieties, then as aliens and robots) but really it's been right here the whole time! We can make first contact with an alien we have shared a world with for the entirety of human history. Like, not only is that objectively the coolest thing ever but like, it has so much potential in terms of conservation, in terms of the very construction of ou self-concept as humans, of society, of science, of life in general. I want to be a part of that. I want to talk to a whale and understand what it tells me. I want to make friends with a person who's not human.

    • @notpulverman9660
      @notpulverman9660 Před 6 lety +226

      First communication with sperm whales will not be made by marine biologists.
      It will be made by cryptographers or mathematicians.
      It will probably be done by 50 years of eavesdropping on 2 or more whales talking to each other while observing their actions/brain activity.

    • @angelkotilainen
      @angelkotilainen Před 5 lety +229

      They are vibrational beings, they will not talk or communicate like us, it's designed that way. They are here reminding us that we are vibrational too. Language is outdated. But they recognize Love, the universal vibration that is the only one that matters :) Animals have no real interest in talking human language, and why should they, it's outdated mostly. They are more advanced.

  • @SgtAwesome97
    @SgtAwesome97 Před 4 lety +269

    When you started talking about how their brains are developed, it got me thinking that it is a high possibility that sperm whales have their own language. And even cooler still to me, is that if they indeed do have their own language, it is very possible that given enough time to research it we could actually communicate with them.

  • @zacharyjarrells7084
    @zacharyjarrells7084 Před 4 lety +1733

    Sperm Whale: “Hello, how are you? You are a strange creature, but seem friendly. Would you like to be my friend?”
    Human: “DEAR GOD, MY INSIDES ARE BURNING!! SOMEONE HELP ME PLEASE!! THE NOISE IS TOO LOUD!”

  • @TheHellSpawn000
    @TheHellSpawn000 Před 5 lety +166

    I went on vacation to the carribean with my dad in dominica and there was a adolescent sperm whale so we went diving and the moment the whale noticed us it started coming closer and i cant even put words to the feeling, every click it made felt like a wave of water was hitting me, and it also felt like my heart was stopping and starting back up between clicks and my eyeballs were vibrating. And it was a lone adolescent, not an adult, i was in the water for 2 minutes till i was scrambling to get out, cant imagine what it was like for these divers.

  • @ROOKTABULA
    @ROOKTABULA Před 6 lety +546

    His favourite word: Sketchy.

  • @justintai8725
    @justintai8725 Před 6 lety +694

    Wow that ended too soon. I need more much much more...

    • @longnow
      @longnow  Před 6 lety +141

      Thanks, there's more. Watch the full video here: theinterval.org/salon-talks/02014/oct/07/humanity-and-deep-ocean

  • @everettstone6574
    @everettstone6574 Před 6 lety +1087

    The behavior around humans is fascinating. Besides just curiosity, I think these whales want us to clean them. From what I understand, the head up position is a position of relaxation for sperm whales. They also don't seem to be trying to keep a visual on the people. and, even if they are of great intelligence, I doubt that they would conclude that humans are of such high intelligence as well. They probably think we're some sort of friendly, playful, super skinny seals. So, the only thing that makes sense to me, is that they want us to rub their faces, and maybe remove any parasites we can. Mutual grooming is a long standing social bonding ritual of mammals, so by doing this, it could be the key to unlocking further discoveries of their communication.
    And really, if we can do anything nice for whales, I think we do owe it to them if we can.

  • @MasterVycen
    @MasterVycen Před 6 lety +688

    Since sperm whales are so separated from our ancestry, does that mean that the so-called "spindle cells" evolved twice independently in two distantly related species?

  • @dyproxus1806
    @dyproxus1806 Před 4 lety +341

    Wait, the wail of a whale can *kill* a human at close range without them even trying?! I know that even predatory sperm whales are gentle giants, but the giant can still, metaphorically, step on us by accident.
    Also, if sperm whale hearing is sensitive enough to detect these blasts of sound from thousands of miles away, how are they capable of handling their own voice when they bellow? That’s wild!

  • @seanlehmann4235
    @seanlehmann4235 Před 6 lety +267

    I could have listened to that for hours.

    • @longnow
      @longnow  Před 6 lety +55

      Thank you! Full video of this talk is here: theinterval.org/salon-talks/02014/oct/07/humanity-and-deep-ocean

  • @toni5290
    @toni5290 Před 5 lety +286

    This is probably the most interesting video I'v seen in a while.

  • @jcloud2928
    @jcloud2928 Před 6 lety +325

    I'm glad I "clicked" on this video. Public education would have been facinating if this kind of information was standard.

  • @pewpewcat7679
    @pewpewcat7679 Před 5 lety +72

    One of those rare moments when I learn so much just by watching a short clip. Great footage, amazing information. This is just incredible. I knew none of these things that were discussed. Brings the socratic paradox back. Thanks for sharing!

  • @mikerichardson7261
    @mikerichardson7261 Před 2 lety +20

    Don't know where this guy got the idea that "great apes" don't feel love or compassion, but he's dead wrong.

  • @thegrinch0614
    @thegrinch0614 Před 5 lety +48

    This is incredible....part of me would love to dive with whales but at the same time the thought alone terrifies me. Such majestic creatures...

  • @LarryC213
    @LarryC213 Před 5 lety +19

    That was amazing. Thank you, sir. There is just no telling what they are capable of doing with that sound.

  • @colbys1257
    @colbys1257 Před 6 lety +7

    This makes me want to jump in the water and cry 'I am so , so, so, so, so fucking sorry for everything we've done".

  • @shruggzdastr8-facedclown
    @shruggzdastr8-facedclown Před 6 lety +262

    ...sounds almost like a Geiger counter.

    • @mikuspalmis
      @mikuspalmis Před 5 lety +45

      If the whale was bio-mechanical it could be an H.R. Giger counter.

  • @Delicia1362125
    @Delicia1362125 Před 6 lety +388

    Ever since I was a child sperm whales have captured my heart and my imagination. They are so very special. Back when I was a kid no one really knew much about them and it has only been in recent years where researchers have learned what the have so far and I'm sure there is plenty more to learn about them. To my knowledge Jacques Cousteau and his gang were the first to get close to the sperm whale. I'm 64 now and it is still my dream to greet and meet these magnificent beings. Perhaps one day................

  • @alnosaints
    @alnosaints Před 5 lety +111

    They sure are friendly to us not to kill us

  • @InfamousWolf89
    @InfamousWolf89 Před 6 lety +306

    I want to freedive with sperm whales now. After hearing about them, it feels like it would be like meeting an intelligent extraterrestrial. Unable to speak the same language and both from vastly different environments, but somehow feel some sort of a simple empathic connection. They are probably just as curious as humans as we are about them

  • @equarg
    @equarg Před 6 lety +312

    Wow. Just wow.
    An amazing experience! Thanks for sharing!

  • @simon01ize
    @simon01ize Před 6 lety +5

    Almost speechless,just incredible and beautiful souls.

  • @lucrebrazzi4069
    @lucrebrazzi4069 Před 2 lety +31

    Elephants communicate with each other over long distances with tall standing waves that are below human hearing. I wonder how these sharp rapports are better suited to travel through water. Also the divers got cooked like a hot dog does in a microwave. That energy excited the water in their bodies. Really fascinating stuff.

  • @McKeelix
    @McKeelix Před 6 lety +115

    That is absolutely terrifying??? But also awesome.

  • @catelinenglert6256
    @catelinenglert6256 Před 2 lety +12

    I watched this for the 10th time and I’m still I. Awe over these amazing creatures

  • @Distant_INC
    @Distant_INC Před 6 měsíci +5

    Legitimately the most interesting thing I've watched tonight.

  • @myribunt5261
    @myribunt5261 Před 5 lety +12

    This is amazing. Truly amazing. Thank you

  • @thetransformationnow
    @thetransformationnow Před 5 lety +6

    Thanks for sharing this. Fascinating Beings we share this Mother Earth with! I could feel my Heart opened from hearing the clicks, WOW!

  • @jslfcs7087
    @jslfcs7087 Před 6 lety +4

    Wow. That is just incredible. Thank you for sharing this with us.

  • @ats-3693
    @ats-3693 Před 5 lety +7

    Wow i could listen to this guy talk about this for hours, I'd love to go to one of his lectures.

  • @OceanPictures
    @OceanPictures Před 6 lety +9

    Very informative video! Ive always wanted to film them underwater, thanks for sharing the risks and the experience. Amazing creatures

  • @truegirl2anna
    @truegirl2anna Před 6 lety +2

    Don’t know why this was in my recommended but wow, stayed to watch the entire thing and boy, does this guy know how to make this appear so much more fascinating

  • @Noone-of-your-Business
    @Noone-of-your-Business Před 6 lety +224

    Two HUNDRED decibels?? That is the rating of a _space shuttle liftoff_ at close range!

  • @jordansage9655
    @jordansage9655 Před 6 lety +64

    Melville didn't choose a sperm whale in Moby-Dick for nothing. Perhaps we'll discover years from now they are in fact the most intelligent creatures that have ever evolved on planet Earth after human beings...

  • @Darkboy2525
    @Darkboy2525 Před 5 lety +11

    Nature is so extremely awesome ! So elusive and beautiful ! The wonders NEVER end !

  • @CraftyZanTub
    @CraftyZanTub Před 5 lety +7

    I bet those whales were speaking softly and swimming gently amongst a tiny life form in their midst.

  • @Gunners_Mate_Guns
    @Gunners_Mate_Guns Před 6 lety +381

    This animal fills me with awe.
    Fun fact: There is at least one confirmed example of a large bull sperm whale making a dive that lasted 90 minutes and went 2 miles down!
    Yeah, holy shit!

  • @campos3452
    @campos3452 Před 5 lety +6

    This was incredible my ears heard something new and different through the internet. Internet is truly a miracle.

  • @Claytone-Records
    @Claytone-Records Před 4 lety +32

    I did quite a bit of snorkeling in Japan in the 70’s. I experienced that sound and didn’t know what it was. I never saw them and have no idea how far away they were. This is all very fascinating. I wonder what John Lilly would have made of this?

  • @The1sillygirly
    @The1sillygirly Před 6 lety +425

    I don't think you can say that because they have larger brains, they have more sophisticated language than us. I saw a documentary that said it's not the size of the brain, but the brain to body ratio that determines intelligence with a species as a whole. Larger brains are needed to control larger bodies,

    • @rodluvan1976
      @rodluvan1976 Před 6 lety +85

      obviously you can not say that decisively, but *if* the neocortex in humans is used for language, conscious thought and abstract thinking it most likely is that in whales too as we share a relatively recent common ancestor. a neocortex does not need to be larger because the animal is large or 'talks' louder. that would be silly to think.

  • @georgeisaak5321
    @georgeisaak5321 Před 6 lety +12

    WOW , just wow ! I have seen tons of documentaries for those animals but this is completely new to me !!!!

    • @longnow
      @longnow  Před 6 lety +3

      thanks! you might enjoy watching the full talk here: theinterval.org/salon-talks/02014/oct/07/humanity-and-deep-ocean

  • @Wasaia
    @Wasaia Před 5 lety +17

    Chills down my spine! Incredible beings.

  • @MDZac2024
    @MDZac2024 Před 5 lety +2

    Just incredible. How has anyone disliked this video.

  • @MrAdryan1603
    @MrAdryan1603 Před 6 lety +1

    That was the most fascinating talk/video. How amazing and humbling

  • @yugandali
    @yugandali Před 6 lety +5

    Fascinating! Thanks for posting.

  • @heartbeatsdrum
    @heartbeatsdrum Před 2 lety +4

    Just finished Moby Dick today so this is much appreciated.

  • @agerven
    @agerven Před 5 lety +2

    Amazing. Learned so many new things from this!

  • @antonthemanton3065
    @antonthemanton3065 Před 6 lety +11

    Amazing video.... It is terrifying and inspiring at the same time how little we know.

  • @kiwihame
    @kiwihame Před 5 lety +2

    That's so wild! Such amazing creatures. Great talk!

  • @erikadavis4696
    @erikadavis4696 Před 5 lety +3

    I watched the entire presentation and it was very interesting and informative. Wonderful work.

  • @SeaBassVEVO
    @SeaBassVEVO Před 6 lety +3

    Beautiful talk! Thank you!

  • @claytondorris2702
    @claytondorris2702 Před 4 lety +1

    This is making my ears ring

  • @DG-ut4xy
    @DG-ut4xy Před 6 lety +1

    How interesting would it be when it is possible to read and understand their language/speech. Fascinating creatures!

  • @saintmichaelsmorningstar6451

    For the record , even though it doesn’t matter......... This is my dream , all of it

  • @jarrednorfleet8662
    @jarrednorfleet8662 Před 4 dny

    Amazing video. Very educational, direct and fun to listen to. Recommend for all ages.

  • @lass-inangeles7564
    @lass-inangeles7564 Před 5 lety +121

    Wow. I'm blown away. So fortunate to have come across this video. What an out of world experience. Why look for aliens, when we have whales, dolphins and so much more in the ocean. Thank you!

  • @gtekksupport873
    @gtekksupport873 Před 6 lety +1

    Amazing! Thank you so much for sharing!

  • @sewcrazy9433
    @sewcrazy9433 Před 6 lety +11

    What a great video gift!! This was captivating and actually brought me inner peace.

  • @spoopyscaryskeletons9187
    @spoopyscaryskeletons9187 Před 5 lety +2

    I love all the comments on here, they’re so interesting and wholesome. ❤️

  • @patrickh.copelin6235
    @patrickh.copelin6235 Před 5 lety +4

    Wow , that is truly amazing

  • @bushmonger950
    @bushmonger950 Před 4 lety +28

    2:04
    *come here human*

  • @abecoulter8550
    @abecoulter8550 Před 4 lety +23

    apparently the clicks can heat up the surrounding water

  • @dandelion1627
    @dandelion1627 Před 6 lety +13

    Amazing. Beautiful. Out of this world (or the world we thought we understand). Highly intelligent beings are always peaceful, humble, accepting, and loving.

  • @jensmith1990
    @jensmith1990 Před 6 měsíci

    This is absolutely incredible !!

  • @jaxnean2663
    @jaxnean2663 Před 6 lety +6

    Wow! Totally amazing!

  • @joeskill4663
    @joeskill4663 Před 6 lety +3

    Wow . Amazing the sounds they make and how powerful that is. thats cool~

  • @kathryncarter6143
    @kathryncarter6143 Před 6 lety +5

    So cool! Keep up the research!

  • @aaronyandell2929
    @aaronyandell2929 Před 6 lety +1

    These divers are crazy bold. I like that.

  • @BradenEliason
    @BradenEliason Před 6 lety +3

    For all those people comparing 236 dB to the loudness of other things: the reference loudness used for water is lower than the reference loudness used in air. Quantities measured in dB are always relative measurements. It's not a prefect conversion factor, but if you subtract 61.5 dB from the loudness in water you'll get the approximate comparable loudness in air. 236 dB wanted is *roughly* comparable to 174.5 dB in air. Still very very loud.

  • @kari8187
    @kari8187 Před 6 lety +2

    Absolutely fascinating!

  • @fuckyouyoutube7921
    @fuckyouyoutube7921 Před 5 lety +30

    Never knew they could actually kill you with their clicks. Amazing video, thank you for sharing.

  • @alibee1978
    @alibee1978 Před 5 lety +1

    Mind absolutely blown !

  • @chuckkline2970
    @chuckkline2970 Před 5 lety +2

    Awesome video! Learned a lot. Thank you.

  • @SpecialAgentJamesAki
    @SpecialAgentJamesAki Před 5 lety +2

    Wow very friendly even with the pup there!