
A humpback whale stranded on Germany's Baltic Sea coast freed itself overnight after days of rescue efforts, biologist Robert Marc Lehmann said on Friday.
The whale had been stuck in shallow waters off Timmendorfer Strand since early on Monday, drawing heavy media attention.
Lehmann said the whale had been able to swim into deeper water through a channel dug out by a floating excavator. The biologist had snorkelled out to the animal the previous day and tried to guide it through the trench.
Lehmann said the crucial thing now was for the 12- to 15-metre marine mammal to remain in open water and, if possible, make its way to the North Sea. It was still not safe, he stressed, saying its release from the sandbank was not yet a rescue, but only a small step in the right direction.
The animal would only be home once it reached the Atlantic, Lehmann added.
In wrangling dark matter, some scientists find inspiration in the Torah, Krishna and Christ
Heartfelt Objections to Visit with Your Adored One
The ‘Stranger Things’ finale, explained: What happens to Vecna? And why was a key character’s fate left unknown?
The Ascent of Robots: Occupations That Man-made brainpower Might Dispense with
Private sector revives the climate disaster database Trump tried to squash
Can scientists detect life without knowing what it looks like? Research using machine learning offers a new way
Israel approves 19 new West Bank settlements in major annexation push
Air superiority and long-range strikes: what China's war games say about how it might assault Taiwan
Meet the astronauts about to make history on flight around the moon













