Zoology

ShukerNature: HAGGLING OVER THE HAFGUFA


 

The hafgufa, as depicted in a medieval manuscript, specifically the British Library MS. Harley 3244, fol. 65r, 1236, c.1250, (public area)

The hafgufa is a mysterious sea monster described
in
Konungs skuggsjá (‘The King’s Mirror’), which is a mid-13th-Century
Previous Norse manuscripts – however that isn’t all. It has truly been traced again as
far as an account in a 2nd-Century-AD textual content from Alexandria, Egypt, entitled
Physiologus, whose textual content is accompanied
by illustrations of a whale-like creature termed the aspidochelone, depicted with
its enormous mouth extensive open and fishes leaping into it.

In line with The King’s Mirror:

It’s stated of the character of this fish [the hafgufa] that, when
it goes to feed, it offers an important belch out of its throat, together with which
comes quite a lot of meals. All types of close by fish collect, each small and
giant, looking for there to accumulate meals and good sustenance. However the massive fish
retains its mouth open for a time, no roughly extensive than a big sound or
fjord, and unknowing and unheeding, the fish rush in of their numbers. And when
its stomach and mouth are full, [it] closes its mouth, thus catching and hiding
inside it all of the prey that had come looking for meals”

The hafgufa can also be talked about in numerous different
Norse manuscripts from this similar interval. Furthermore, an identical description for the
aspidochelone is given as follows in Physiologus:

When it’s hungry it opens its mouth and exhales a sure sort
of good-smelling odor from its mouth, the odor of which, as soon as the smaller fish
have perceived it, they collect themselves in its mouth. However when his mouth is
crammed with numerous little fish, he out of the blue closes his mouth and swallows
them.

Within the scientific age, there was a lot
hypothesis and dispute as as to if the hafgufa was based mostly upon an actual
creature, and, in that case, what that creature is likely to be, with the consensus being
that it was in all probability some kraken-like monster.

 

An aspidochelone
from
a French
manuscript, c.
1270, held on the J. Paul Getty Museum (public area)

Now, nevertheless, this maritime thriller beast’s
true nature could ultimately have been revealed, because of the publicising of a outstanding
mode of feeding behaviour practised by numerous rorqual whales.

Often known as entice feeding and first
scientifically recorded in 2010, numerous humpback whales Megaptera novaeangliae and Bryde’s whales Balaeonoptera brydei have been noticed ready immobile on the
water floor in an upright place with their enormous mouths extensive open, into
which shoals of fishes unsuspectingly swim to their doom, fatally mistaking the
whales’ gaping jaws for shelter, till the jaws shut, engulfing them!

Furthermore, this eyecatching exercise has
these days attracted worldwide consideration because of an Instagram video clip of a
Bryde’s whale performing it that went important after that includes in a 2021 BBC
wildlife documentary (click on right here to view this clip).

In line with the Norse manuscripts, as famous
above, the hafgufa behaves in an identical method, even actively attracting shoals
of fishes to swim into its open mouth by emitting a particular fragrance. And certain
sufficient, when looking for to lure fishes into their mouths by regurgitating meals,
each the humpback and Bryde’s whales produce a definite odor.

An in depth examine inspecting and evaluating
medieval Norse accounts of the hafgufa with modern-day reviews of entice feeding
by rorquals was revealed on 28 February 2023 within the journal Marine Mammal Science (click on right here to learn it). The paper was co-authored
by maritime archaeologist John McCarthy, from the School of Humanities, Arts
and Social Sciences at Flinders College in Australia, who had change into
on this correlation after studying in regards to the hafgufa in conventional
Norse mythology.

As soon as once more, due to this fact, it appears seemingly that
an ostensibly fabulous monster of mythology can lay declare to a agency foundation in mainstream
zoological reality in spite of everything.

 

One other illustration
of the hafgufa, this time from Ortelius’s 1658 map of Iceland (public area)

 



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