Soon you come across a blowhole forming a vertical shaft 1.5m in diameter that leads to the surface. |
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A burly man raises a stick with a hook on the end to strike a baby seal as it surfaces from a blowhole in the ice. |
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A calf will hump up onto the back of the sleeping mother, breach onto her, cover her blowhole with his tail. |
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The bears wait and watch at the seal's blowhole, not moving, perhaps hiding their black noses behind the ice. |
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This can probably be attributed to the top blowhole wicking away the rising hot air. |
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They will sit by a seal blowhole for hours, waiting, until the animal surfaces. |
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When they dive, muscles close the blowhole and their ribcage collapses to keep air bubbles from forming in the bloodstream. |
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When the whale is diving, a special structure known as a nasal plug stops water from coming into the blowhole. |
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Clicks are transmitted from an area located immediately below the blowhole. |
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Surf on the Central Coast or on the South Coast, where you can also see Kiama's famous blowhole. |
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A cetacean is a name used to describe the group of marine mammals with a blowhole. |
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When the whale comes to the surface, muscles 30 around the blowhole contract to open the nasal plug. |
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One of the whales spouted a cloud of mist from its blowhole. |
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A blowhole almost the size of a football burst open five metres away from the boat. |
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In some cases, the ceiling entrance serves as a blowhole from which water spouts during times of high tide or rough seas. |
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The exact method is not clearly understood, but it involves air trapped behind the nasal plug in the blowhole. |
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When warm air shoots out of the blowhole, it cools as it comes into contact with the outside air. |
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Some people think the blow is caused by water from around the blowhole being forced into the air. |
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Sometimes this air is released through a partly open blowhole, and small bubbles can be seen as the whale vocalizes. |
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A whale or other sea creature is portrayed on this club, with a human figure as the blowhole. |
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In an Icelandic legend, a man threw a stone at a fin whale and hit the blowhole, causing the whale to burst. |
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For instance, a blowhole, a sand flea, that silly putty smirk you wear in the checkout line while having a nice day. |
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Dolphins are capable of making a broad range of sounds using nasal airsacs located just below the blowhole. |
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Nothing in the hunt is as memorable as the blessed pause that comes in its wake, as the wounded whale sprays blood through its blowhole, and Thomas's awestruck face is dusted with a rain of red. |
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If they see a spout of mist from the blowhole of a grey whale, the tribal members will paddle stealthily up to the whale and throw a sharp harpoon into the mammal's flanks. |
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Blue whales are easily recognized due to its imposing size, long body, prominent head, and particularly, the 9-metre spout of water from its blowhole! |
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Breathing involves expelling stale air from the blowhole, forming an upward, steamy spout, followed by inhaling fresh air into the lungs. |
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The bottlenose dolphin has a single blowhole located on the dorsal surface of the head consisting of a hole and a muscular flap. |
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The distal sac is connected to the blowhole and the terminus of the left passage. |
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When the whale is submerged, it can close the blowhole, and air that passes through the phonic lips can circulate back to the lungs. |
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In Ensenada, you may go horseback riding, visit the famous blowhole, play golf, take a city and Mexican fiesta tour, ride a jeep into the countryside, visit a winery, or enjoy a beach party with a barbecue dinner. |
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Its flippers are long and slightly bent, looking a bit like the shape of like bumps. Because its single blowhole is at the front of the head on the left side, its blow shoots forward. |
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See the Caiguna blowhole before zig zaging along the highway to the Nuytsland Nature Reserve, where you can 4WD to a series of small caves and collapsed caverns known as Dolines. |
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At least one fresh dolphin carcass found in the Gulf was bleeding from the mouth and blowhole, according to Lori Deangelis, a dolphin tour operator in Perdido Bay. |
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Porpoises, like other odontocetes, possess only one blowhole. |
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The bottlenose dolphin typically rises to the surface to breathe through its blowhole two to three times per minute, although it can remain submerged for up to 20 minutes. |
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By contrast, a bottlenose's sense of smell is poor, because its blowhole, the analogue to the nose, is closed when underwater and it opens only for breathing. |
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