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Gray whale skeleton takes shape in Kodiak for museum

WASHED UP: Bones were buried for four years to detach blubber.

KODIAK -- The 165 bones of a California gray whale are slowly being reassembled for a new Kodiak museum set to open next year.

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Conservationist Stacy Studebaker, photographer Hank Pennington and expert bone restorer Lee Post of Homer were busy this month working on the whale bones with volunteers.

The whale's journey has been a long one. The 38-foot animal washed up on a beach more than five years ago in Pasagshak on Kodiak Island's northeast side.

Studebaker spotted the drifting dead whale while kayaking in a bay near Pasagshak Beach with husband Mike Sirofchuck in May 2000.

When it beached, Studebaker saw an opportunity. After teaching biology for 20 years in Kodiak, she said, "This could be the ultimate science project."

No one knows why the male whale died. The whale was estimated to be 7 to 10 years old. Gray whales can live to be 100. It had no external damage.

Studebaker put together a team organized as the Kodiak Gray Whale Project that would eventually number more than 125 people.

How to preserve the whale was the first obstacle. Left on the beach, the carcass could have could have been torn apart by the island's famous bears.

The group received a grant from the Alaska Conservation Foundation for $60,000. Studebaker and organizers decided to dig a 40-foot long trench about 10 feet deep with the help of a backhoe provided by Pasagshak resident Mike Anderson.

The whale stayed underground for four years. When it was dug up, it was virtually free of tons of blubber and intact for preservation.

The bones were hauled in truckloads to the National Marine Fishery Service for cleaning and storage and then taken to the Fisheries Science Center.

Studebaker and Post have been working 10-hour days on rearticulation -- putting the skeleton back together. They expect the last phase of the project to take about six months.

They hope to finish in time for the opening next summer of the Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge Visitor Center.

Studebaker on a recent day was busy filling bone nicks and cracks with putty.

The whale bones, surprisingly light to pick up, were stretched along the floor of the science center and on top of tables and shelves. They're being fitted together with steel rods.

"It's sort of a steel skeleton within a skeleton," Post said.

Post has been a trailblazer when it comes to whale restoration. Post has restored sea lions, a turtle, reindeer and several whales, including one hanging in the science center foyer.

When he started, Post found little documentation on how to restore a whale.

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