The whaling industry comparing whaling and the occupation of the 19th century has undergone a major change in technology and politics since the era of Harman Melville's 1851 novel "Moby Dick". Whale is safer and faster than Melville imagines, with new po, faster motor boat, and slaughterhouse on the shore. These changes are mainly due to the increase in the value of new technology and whale products. With this new whaling method, the number of whales drastically decreased.
In the late nineteenth century, the whaling industry developed in the Azores. Whaling plays a central role in the economy and culture of Faial and Pico islands. It kills whales and whales, works not only to extract valuable oils for machinery and equipment at local factories, but also to make soaps, perfumes, cosmetics, flour, and fats. We will make musical instruments, tools and artwork from bones to local craftsmen. However, the diffusion of mineral oil and synthetic products from underground oil replaced the animal oil, and the economic activity around whaling decreased. Nonetheless, the whaling of these islands did not end until the International Maritime Commission prohibited fishing under international treaties in 1984.
Whales pursue their products without mercy and are now protected by international law. The North Atlantic blue whale is almost extinct in the 20th century, with a population of less than 450 people. The population of the North Pacific blue whale was exposed to a serious threat by the World Conservation Union for Nature. In addition to whaling, they also face the threat of bycatch and marine pollution. Traditionally, the Arctic Circle has used people's whale meat, fat and whale. Various cultures around the world, especially in Inuit, Vietnam and coastal areas of Ghana, sometimes host a whale funeral. Whales occasionally appear in literature and movies. It looks like a white whale of Mohdie Dick of Herman Melville. Small whales such as white whales are sometimes trapped and trained as tricks, but reproductive success rates are low, animals often die within a few months of capture. Whale watching is a form of tourism around the world
Melville 's "Moby Dick" emerged in the mid - 19th century and again devastated humans. A supernatural monster pretending to be a bald whale meets Captain Ahab and the game of fate continues. After the whale destroyed Ahab and his ship, Ismail, the only survivor, drifted over the prince coffin the day before being saved; symbolism carries the concept of transformation and rebirth, but at a high cost . Prophecy plays an indispensable role in the story, suggesting that magic exists in the far corner of the world.