There are estimated to be 3,000 fin whales off California, Oregon and Washington.
Fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus) can be seen year-round off southern California, in the Norwegian and Barents Seas, the Gulf of California, the Mediterranean Sea, the Gulf of Maine, and the Bay of Fundy.
I'm assuming you meant whales in the waters OFF Antarctica. Some whale species living in the Antarctic Ocean include Right, Blue, Sei, Humpback, Minke, Fin, Sperm, Orca and Southern Bottlenose Whales.
Based on growth layers in the ear plugs, it is estimated fin whales can live to 80-95 years of age. One fin whale that stranded in Denmark in 2010 was estimated to be 135-140 years old, based on the acid in its eye.
In Southeast Alaska, mainly humpbacks. You can also see killer whales and Dall's and harbor porpoises. In Cook Inlet you can see beluga whales. Off Kodiak Island you can see fin and humpback whales. In northern Alaska, you can see bowhead whales.
Killer whales off the west coast of the United States spend the summer in the north pacific near Washington state and further north. In the winter they migrate to southern California
whales
There are whales in the ocean off the coast of Alaska.
The best location to see blue whales in their natural habitat is in the waters off the coast of California, particularly in the area around the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary.
Off Course Not :P lol
NO
whales whales stop cutting off their tails
jeremy shada