Maggie Koerth-Baker is the science editor at BoingBoing.net. She writes a monthly column for The New York Times Magazine and is the author of Before the Lights Go Out, a book about electricity, infrastructure, and the future of energy. You can find Maggie on Twitter and Facebook.

Maggie goes places and talks to people. Find out where she'll be speaking next.

  • jetfx

    Actually seals can move surprisingly fast on land. During the winter they come up in my yard, and you can sometimes find them wandering several miles inland, before they go back to sea.

  • GawainLavers

    That ice boring comes at a steep cost to the Weddell’s seal:  Their teeth are worn out relatively early in their lives.  Is that covered in the video?  Attenborough talks about it in Blue Planet.

    • http://maggiekb.com/ Maggie Koerth-Baker

      The video has no narration at all. But you are correct. 

  • http://pocketprogressive.org Uncle Geo
  • giantasterisk

    After hearing the first “Yeah…” @ 2:00 I expected the narration to begin. “Yeah… oh, yeah…”

  • miasm

    Hmmph, I, uh.. wha! Gah!
    That was beautiful.

  • tacochuck

    Am I the only one who was really worried the baby seal would not find the hole in the ice to get air again?

  • Eliot Phan

    not a arctic wildlife biologist, and haven’t yet watched the video – but wouldn’t polar bears be a natural predator of out-of-water seals?

    • francoisroux

      Me was wondering the same thing actually…

      • http://www.facebook.com/andrea.habura Andrea Habura

         These are Antarctic seals. No polar bears.

  • Jennifer Hauf

    LOL. They ARE blobs of jelly.