Photo: AP In this photo of con-joined dolphin taken by gym teacher Tugrul Metin, while he was vacationing during the first few days of August 2014, in the Aegean Sea coastal town of Dikili, Izmir province of Turkey. Turkish media reports n Monday Aug. 11, 2014, that Turkish marine biologists will examine the con-joined two-headed dolphin calf that has washed up on a beach in western Turkey.
Photo: APIn this photo of con-joined dolphin taken by gym teacher Tugrul Metin, while he was vacationing during the first few days of August 2014, in the Aegean Sea coastal town of Dikili, Izmir province of Turkey. Turkish media reports on Monday Aug. 11, 2014, that Turkish marine biologists will examine the con-joined two-headed dolphin calf that has washed up on a beach in western Turkey.
ANKARA, Türkiye (AP) - Türk basınında çıkan haberlerde, Türk bilim adamları Türkiye'nin batısındaki bir sahilde yıkanmış bir iki başlı yunus incelemek söylüyorlar.
Özel Doğan Haber Ajansı yapışık yunus buzağı kalıntıları bir tatil spor salonu öğretmen tarafından İzmir'in geçen hafta Ege kenti yakınlarında, Dikili'de bir plajda keşfedilen söyledi. Bu yunus yapışık ikizlerin benzer bir nadir bir olay oldu, diyerek, Akdeniz Üniversitesi deniz biyoloğu Mehmet Gökoğlu aktardı.
ENGLISH VIEWERS
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Turkish media reports say Turkish scientists will examine a two-headed dolphin that washed up on a beach in western Turkey.
The private Dogan news agency said the remains of conjoined dolphin calf were discovered on a beach in Dikili, near the Aegean city of Izmir last week by a vacationing gym teacher. It quoted Akdeniz University marine biologist Mehmet Gokoglu as saying the dolphin was a rare occurrence, similar to conjoined twins.
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