Earth Changes
Colin Barnes from Cork Whale Watch, who has spent several weeks observing the build-up of this activity confirms there are huge 'fish clouds' comprising small sprat or larval herring in the area and these are likely to be what is attracting the fin whales in such numbers.
Combined estimates from land and boat based sightings suggest there could also be 20 or more fin whales in the waters between Seven Heads and Galley Head, County Cork.

Officials examine a dead Minke whale which washed ashore on a Truro beach overnight on Monday, August 18, 2014.
According to the report, the whale, estimated to be between 20 and 25 feet long and weigh between three and five tons, was found when volunteers from the International Fund for Animal Welfare Marine Mammal Rescue and Research program went looking for it early on Monday.
Researchers are planning to conduct a necropsy, but have not yet decided whether it will be performed at the scene or whether the whale will be moved to a separate site first.
The report indicated that this is the third minke whale death this season. One died last week near Barnstable Harbor and another died in June near Provincetown.
Source: The Cape Cod Times

The whale was originally seen in the harbor in open water with the ability to swim, so no rescue attempt was made. But on Sunday, the animal was found dead near the marina.
The whale was originally spotted Saturday afternoon and monitored by the International Fund for Animal Welfare and the Barnstable harbormaster, said Michael Booth, a spokesman for fund. The whale was originally seen in the harbor in open water with the ability to swim, so a team from the fund did not make a rescue attempt, Booth said.
On Sunday, the animal was found dead near the marina.
Booth said that the fund was trying to get permission to perform a necropsy on the stranded animal to determine its cause of death, but that it could be days before the results were available. He said he expected the carcass would be removed from the harbor some time on Monday.
This crack opened up on August 17, 2014. Although social networkers believe it was created by an earthquake at the San Andres Fault, a geologist from the University of Sonora indicates that the ground has probably collapsed because of a stream of groundwater.

Josiah Ryan from Soho films the beast approaching him from across the 42nd St. station at Bryant Park.
Dramatic footage filmed by SoHo man Josiah Ryan shows the aggressive rodent charging down the platform at 42nd St. station at Bryant Park in Midtown late Friday night.
It then jumps up, causing him to scream out: "Ah! Oh s--t!"
"Oh my God, man, got it all on video, too," Ryan is heard saying off-camera.
Published Wednesday, the New Hampshire-based almanac predicts a "super-cold" winter in the eastern two-thirds of the country. The west will remain a little bit warmer than normal.
"Colder is just almost too familiar a term," Editor Janice Stillman said. "Think of it as a refriger-nation."
More bad news for those who can't stand snow: Most of the Northeast is expected to get more snowfall than normal, though it will be below normal in New England.
Before unpacking the parka, however, remember that "colder than average" is still only about 2 to 5 degrees difference.

A fisherman has been killed by a rare 15ft crocodile called Michael Jackson as his wife looked on.
A 57-year-old fisherman was attacked and killed by a crocodile in front of his wife while they were fishing in the Northern Territory.
The man was fishing off a bank on the Adelaide River when the attack happened, Northern Territory police say.
His body was recovered overnight on Tuesday and the crocodile believed to be responsible was shot dead.

A Fraser Island dingo. The island’s dingo population is quite low.
Dingoes which attacked a man on Fraser Island could be captured and put down.
A 25-year-old man suffered injuries to his head, legs and buttocks when he was attacked by three dingoes while on the beach at 10.30pm on Monday. The man was about 100m from the township of Happy Valley, which is fenced off from dingoes, and managed to escape and get to safety.
Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service (QPWS) is investigating the attack. On Wednesday it did not rule out capturing and destroying the dingoes.
Two dingoes which mauled a three-year-old girl on the island in 2011 were destroyed, although there were questions about the circumstances of the attack.
Around 40 per cent of Britain's remaining 20,000-strong white-clawed crayfish population is expected to die within a year after the government confirmed the existence of crayfish plague in the River Allen in Dorset.
All 8,000 of the river's white-clawed crayfish are forecast to perish at the hands of the plague, a fungal disease carried by the larger Signal Crayfish from America, which is immune to it. Matt Shardlow, head of the Buglife insect charity, said: "Generally there's no coming back once the plague arrives and I think it means we're looking at the imminent end of the species across the south west," adding that there is a real danger it could eventually spread across the whole country.
A spectacular video has emerged of three simultaneous waterspouts which appeared off the coast of southern Sweden last week.
The impressive clip was filmed by Phlip Devries in Beddingestrand, Skåne, Sweden.
A waterspout is a vortex (usually appearing as a funnel-shaped cloud) that occurs over a body of water.










Comment: The robotic quality of the video could be explained by the footage being shot from a drone with a remotely operated camera.
As for a hypothesis; An earthquake may possibly have been involved in this event, which again may key into lowered solar activity and the decrease in the surface to core E-field, which reduces the binding force and loosens the tectonic plates relative to each other. In short: Earth is opening up, which is clear from the high increase in seismic activity observed over the last decade.
For more in-depth information about our Earth changes: Earth Changes and the Human Cosmic Connection