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The abundance of krill attracts other visitors to the peninsula in the summer.
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Antarctic minke whales.
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Their pointed heads and short dorsal fins give them speed and endurance.
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And they need both.
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There are other whales here, too.
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Killers.
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This is an extended family of mothers and their young.
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And a male with a huge dorsal fin almost two metres high.
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A lone minke whale.
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It's just what this group of killer whales are looking for.
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Working as a team, as they have done for decades, they fan out across the strait in search of their quarry.
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And they've found it!
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The minke races away, pursued by outriders on each flank.
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Terrified, the minke heads for the shore.
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It's so desperate to escape, it almost beaches itself.
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It makes a desperate break for freedom.
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Two hours and 20 miles later, the minke is still alive and swimming strongly.
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Its only real defense is its endurance, but the killers work as a team, with fresh ones replacing the outriders in relays.
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And as the minke tires, the battering and the biting begins.
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Seabirds are attracted by the smell of fresh blood rising from the water.
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The killers try to flip the minke over.
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If they can manage to keep its blowhole underwater, it will drown.
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One forces the minke's whole body down below the surface.
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And then, the final strike.
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The team drag the minke under for the last time.
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And the hunters, finally, can feed.