College of the Atlantic research associate and COA Allied Whale senior scientist Dan DenDanto articulates a long-finned pilot whale for display at Bridgewater State University.College of the Atlantic research associate and COA Allied Whale senior scientist Dan DenDanto articulates a long-finned pilot whale for display at Bridgewater State University.The whale, named “Vector” by scientists, washed up at Cape Cod earlier this week.

Dan DenDanto of College of the Atlantic is tasked with turning her skeleton into a museum exhibit. He was on the road Friday morning to pick up the final parts of the skeleton.

“She was tracked nearly every year of her life, and through documenting five calves, so she was a prolific mother whale, and died rather unexpectedly,” he says. “The carcass (was) found floating off the coast of Stellwagen Bank off of Cape Cod very recently.”

DenDanto says the process of turning a whale carcass into a museum exhibit can take between one and two-and-one-half years to complete.

“And that’s my passion, that interpretation of the exhibit or the animal, whatever the museum message is to the public,” he says. “For me, I did that through sculpture and form with a very large medium. So I feel pretty privileged to be able to do that.”

DenDanto explained the history and significance of this preservation process to Maine Public: 

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