EN_01539183_0202

RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS
This handout photo taken on September 20, 2022 and received on September 21 from the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania shows the carcass of one of 14 sperm whales beached on King Island, off Tasmania's north coast. - Australian wildlife investigators were on September 21 trying to piece together why more than a dozen young male sperm whales died in a mass stranding on a remote beach in the state of Tasmania. (Photo by Handout / Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS
2022-09-20
HANDOUT/AFP/East News
AFP
HANDOUT
AFP_32JT4AW
2,09MB
32cm x 22cm by 300dpi
14, 20, 2022, 21, A, ADVERTISING, AFP, AND, ANIMAL, AS, AUSTRALIA, AUSTRALIAN, BEACH, BEACHED, BY, CAMPAIGNS, CARCASS, CLIENTS, COAST, CREDIT, DEPARTMENT, DIED, DISTRIBUTED, DOZEN, EDITORIAL, ENVIRONMENT, FROM, HANDOUT, HORIZONTAL, IN, INVESTIGATORS, ISLAND, KING, MALE, MANDATORY, MARKETING, MASS, MORE, NATURAL, NO, NORTH, OF, OFF, ON, ONE, PHOTO, PIECE, RECEIVED, REMOTE, RESOURCES, RESTRICTED, S, SEPTEMBER, SERVICE, SHOWS, SPERM, STATE, STRANDING, TAKEN, TASMANIA, THAN, THE, THIS, TO, TOGETHER, TOPSHOT, TOPSHOTS, TRYING, USE, WERE, WHALE, WHALES, WHY, WILDLIFE, YOUNG,