A pod of orcas, or killer whales, was seen at the mouth of Tasmania’s Derwent River near Bruny Island on Monday afternoon. There have only been a handful of sightings of the species close to Hobart in the past ten years.

Bruny Island, Tasmania.
Bruny Island, Tasmania. <span class="media-attribution">Image by <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/princeroy/2077024249/in/photolist-4axhWV-716wPS-6BxRao-6BxQAU-716wQ1-6BxTnU-6BxQhC-6BxUB9-6BxQWy-6BxRkE-6BxRPY-6BtGpt-6BxUSL-4aBkHf-6BtJtr-6BxU11-716wQm-4axKyd-4axhYT-6KjxAb-6DdRn5-6De6LJ-6GkXB6-4axhXV-4aBkKY-4aBkJE-4aBkNL-4axhTF-4axhK6-4axhMF-4axhHk-4aBkTy-4aBkEU-4atH2D-92YHTm-BC4Va7-nR5qDQ-oamdM6-o8rEvy-nR5wCy-4axKvC-4atGZB-9WeeBt-4atGXZ-6KjxA7-ebqPR1-ebScJh-6BxXsJ-6eFCsu-4atzVP" target="_blank" rel="external">Prince Roy</a> / <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/uk/" target="_blank" rel="external">CC BY 2.0</a></span>

Orcas are known for travelling long distances in a short amount of time so scientists think it is possible the whales could be the same pod that were spotted off the coast of New South Wales a few days ago. Tasmania has a hotline to call if people spot whales so that scientists can learn more about their movements. Read more: abc.net.au

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