• People look at the three-metre minke whale calf that was found injured and beached on concrete, at Richmond Lock, in the River Thames, London. Reuters
    People look at the three-metre minke whale calf that was found injured and beached on concrete, at Richmond Lock, in the River Thames, London. Reuters
  • The minke whale swims by Teddington Lock in south-west London. AFP
    The minke whale swims by Teddington Lock in south-west London. AFP
  • People gather on the banks of the River Thames hoping to catch a glimpse of the whale. Reuters
    People gather on the banks of the River Thames hoping to catch a glimpse of the whale. Reuters
  • The whale swims by Teddington Lock. AFP
    The whale swims by Teddington Lock. AFP
  • The cetacean was found on Sunday injured and beached on concrete by the river in west London. Reuters
    The cetacean was found on Sunday injured and beached on concrete by the river in west London. Reuters
  • A Royal National Lifeboat Institution boat monitors the young minke near Teddington Lock. AFP
    A Royal National Lifeboat Institution boat monitors the young minke near Teddington Lock. AFP
  • People on a bridge over the Thames trying to see the whale swimming past. Reuters
    People on a bridge over the Thames trying to see the whale swimming past. Reuters

Whale stranded in London's Thames river put down


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A whale calf that got stranded in London's River Thames was put down on Monday, after its condition deteriorated and hopes for its survival faded. The minke whale was first spotted on Sunday night at Richmond Lock, where it became beached on concrete.

Rescuers worked for hours to refloat it and then towed it a mile downstream. They hoped it would make its way to the ocean, but it was later spotted swimming several miles upstream.
When it became stuck again, rescuers decided the best thing to do would be to end its suffering and put it to sleep.

The size of the whale, estimated at around 4.5 meters, suggested that it was still maternally dependent. There was no sign of its mother and it was in poor nutritional health.

It's very rare for whales to come into the River Thames. The port authority said the calf would have come from the North Sea, the divide between Great Britain and Norway.