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Blue whale bones buried in manure for cleaning

A team with the Royal Ontario Museum was hard at work on Thursday burying some of the bones from two blue whale carcasses that washed ashore in Newfoundland this spring.

Royal Ontario Museum team uses composting process to clean the whale bones

A team with the Royal Ontario Museum was in Trenton, Ont., on Thursday to bury in manure some of the bones from two blue whale carcasses. The composting process will clean the bones. (ROM Biodiversity Twitter photo)

A team with the Royal Ontario Museum was hard at work today burying some of the bones from two blue whale carcasses that washed ashore in Newfoundland this spring.

The whale carcasses landed in Trout River and Rocky Harbour, communities on the west coast of Newfoundland. 

The whale bones will be buried in containers filled with manure in Trenton, Ont.,  and the composting process will take just over a year to clean them.

Crews used six dump trucks of manure on Thursday to bury some of the bones, each of which has been marked with a poker chip to help the team reconstruct the skeletal structure.

According to the ROM Biodiversity team, the rest of the bones will be buried in two other containers in the next few days.

The whales were two of nine rare and endangered whales that became trapped in pack ice earlier this spring. It's believed the whales were either crushed by ice or drowned as they tried to surface to breathe.