A team of British palaeontologists has uncovered a vast cetacean burial site in the Atacama Desert, Chile, containing the remains of over 40 whales. The graveyard dates back five million years and offers unprecedented insight into mass stranding events. The fossils, preserved in remarkable condition, show signs of repeated toxic algal blooms that poisoned the animals, a theory that echoes modern threats to marine life.
The excavation, led by scientists from the University of Bristol, has been described as a 'window into the past' and a warning for the future. The site, known as Cerro Ballena, has been carefully mapped and analysed, revealing that at least four separate stranding events occurred over 16,000 years. The research team, backed by the Natural History Museum, has used cutting-edge imaging to reconstruct the deaths.
The findings are published in the journal Royal Society Open Science. The discovery underscores the vulnerability of even the largest marine creatures to sudden environmental changes, a lesson that resonates with today's climate crisis.









