Saturday, June 12, 2021

In the Belly of the Beast: Lobster Diver Nearly Swallowed By a Whale


"James Bartley (1870–1909) is the central figure in a late nineteenth-century story according to which he was swallowed whole by a sperm whale. He was found still living days later in the stomach of the whale, which was dead from harpooning. The story originated of an anonymous form and began to appear in American newspapers.”

The Wheeling Daily Intelligencer and many other U.S. papers (July 1891)

The story, as reported, is that during a whaling expedition off the Falkland Islands, Bartley's boat was attacked by the whale and he landed inside the whale's mouth in 1891. He survived the ordeal and was carved out of the stomach by his peers when they, not knowing he was inside, caught and began skinning the whale, because the hot weather otherwise would have rotted the whale meat. 

It was said that Bartley was inside the whale for 36 hours, that his skin had been bleached by the gastric juices, and that he was blind the rest of his life. In some accounts, however, he was supposed to have returned to work within three weeks. He died 18 years later and his tombstone in Gloucester says "James Bartley – a modern day Jonah."

(Edward B. Davis. “A Whale of a Tale: Fundamentalist Fish Stories.” Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith, 43. 1991)

More recently, the facts were carefully investigated by historian Edward B. Davis, who pointed out many inconsistencies. The Star of the East was not a whaling vessel and its crew list did not include a James Bartley. Moreover, Mrs. John Killam, the wife of the Captain, wrote a letter stating that "there is not one word of truth in the whale story. I was with my husband all the years he was in the Star of the East. There was never a man lost overboard while my husband was in her. The sailor has told a great sea yarn." 

Davis suggested that the story may have been inspired by the "Gorleston whale,” a 30-foot rorqual (blue whale) killed near Great Yarmouth shortly before in June 1891 that generated a lot of publicity.

(Robert B. Durham, "Modern Folklore” and David Gunston, "The man who lived in a whale", Sunday Mail, May 12, 1985.)

While the veracity of the story is in question, Smithsonian Magazine reports it is physically possible for a sperm whale to swallow a human whole, as they are known to swallow giant squid whole. However, such a person would be crushed, drowned or suffocated in the whale's stomach. Similar to ruminants the sperm whale has a four-chambered stomach. The first secretes no gastric juices and has very thick muscular walls to crush the food (since whales cannot chew) and resist the claw and sucker attacks of swallowed squid. The second chamber is larger and is where digestion takes place.

(Rose Eveleth. “Could a Whale Accidentally Swallow You? It Is Possible.” Smithsonian Magazine. February 25, 2013.)


Michael Packard

The New, Factual Report

Michael Packard, a 56-year-old Cape Cod lobster diver, is safe following a fluke encounter with a humpback whale. He was diving off the coast of Provincetown, Massachusetts, this Friday (June 11, 2021) just a little before 8:00 a.m. when the whale caught him unawares.

Packard told CNN affiliate WBZ … 

"I got down to about 45 feet of water, and all of a sudden I just felt this huge bump, and everything went dark. And I could sense that I was moving, and I was like, 'Oh, my God, did I just get bit by a shark?'"

Packard continued … 

"Then I felt around, and I realized there was no teeth and I had felt, really, no great pain. And then I realized, 'Oh, my God, I'm in a whale's mouth. I'm in a whale's mouth, and he's trying to swallow me.'"

Packard, an experienced diver, told WBZ that he still had his breathing apparatus on in the whale's mouth. 

He said … 

"One of the things that went through my mind was just, 'Oh, my God, what if he does swallow me, and here I am, I'm breathing air, and I'm going to breathe in this whale's mouth until my air runs out? I thought to myself, 'OK, this is it. I'm going to die.' And I thought about my kids and my wife. There was no getting out of there."

After spending what he estimated to be 30 seconds in the mammal's mandibles, Packard said the whale surfaced quickly and he saw light. 

"All of a sudden he went up to the surface and just erupted and started shaking his head. I just got thrown in the air, and landed in the water and I was free and I just floated there,” Packard said.

(Evan Simko-Bednarski. “Cape Cod diver left with a whale of a tale after a humpback spat him out.” CNN. June 12, 2021.)

Packard was pulled from the water by a crew mate, rushed ashore, and taken to a nearby hospital. He was bruised but had no broken bones. “I'm good overall,” he said. 

Biologist Jooke Robbins, the director of Humpback Whale Studies at Provincetown's Center for Coastal Studies, said the unusual encounter was most likely an accident. 

Robbins said that humpbacks often engage in so-called "lunge feeding," in which a fast moving whale tries to gather a large volume of food in its mouth quickly. 

Even though a whale's throat might not be large enough for a human to go through, Packard was in real danger. When the whale surfaced to spit him out, he could have died from the air pressure in his own lungs – if you come up to atmospheric pressure and you've held your breath, you could develop an embolism according to Charles Mayo, a marine biologist at the Center For Coastal Studies.

Somehow Packard kept his cool and survived. What a miraculous ending to an unbelievable ordeal. 


Actually Being Swallowed By a Whale?

Humpback whales are baleen whales, which means instead of having teeth as an orca does, they have what’s called “baleen,” a kind of filter feeder system in their mouth. The way their baleen works is they open up their mouth and take in water – around 20,000 liters at one time – and food, like krill or capelin for example. Then they close their mouth and push the water out through their baleen, which acts as a giant sieve. The water goes back out, but the food stays in. 

A humpback whale – with its small esophagus – isn’t believed to be capable of swallowing large prey. From time to time larger pray make it into a whale's mouth, and when that happens, it can become food but only if the whale can fit it past its esophagus.

In a 2012 article for Salon, reporter Ben Shattuck pored over the records at the New Bedford Whaling Museum Research Library. Despite his extensive research at one of the most comprehensive whaling archives on the planet, he failed to find a single report of anyone ever being swallowed alive by a whale. He found plenty of reports of whalers who were bitten or injured by the creatures, and several who died after tangling with a whale, but none related to swallowing.

However … 

Sperm whales could definitely swallow a human. Their esophagus is much larger than any other whale and they often swallow giant squid whole, which means it would be no problem for them to swallow a human.

While these whales have large throats that would make it easier to swallow a human, most of their hunting takes place several miles below the sea, up to 3,000 ft., which is much deeper than a human can swim.

In fact, most hunting takes place so far under the ocean that it has been difficult for scientists and marine biologists to study the hunting methods of sperm whales, even with advanced technology. To date, there has never been a recorded case of a sperm actually consuming a human.

So. the “physeter macrocephalus” or sperm whale, allows for the possibility, but not the probability, of a one-gulp human consumption. And, just in case you're still wondering about survival, here is one last horrifying fact: with the immense heat, lack of oxygen, the very strong stomach acid and so on, no human could survive in a whale for anything more than a few minutes. 

All men live enveloped in whale-lines. All are born with halters round their necks; but it is only when caught in the swift, sudden turn of death, that mortals realize the silent, subtle, ever-present perils of life. And if you be a philosopher, though seated in the whale-boat, you would not at heart feel one whit more of terror, than though seated before your evening fire with a poker, and not a harpoon, by your side.” 

– Herman Melville, Moby-Dick or, the Whale (1851)


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