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		</div><p>Almost 350 whales have died on a New Zealand beach and now volunteers and the authorities have started the huge process of cleaning up.</p>
<p>There were two separate incidents at Farewell Spit in New Zealand, leaving hundreds of whale bodies washed up on a single beach.<br />
A long coastline and a sloping beach makes Farewell Spit something of a whale trap.<br />
Many of the 300 whales a year that usually die on the country’s beaches get washed up there.</p>
<p>Simon Walls, a local ranger, said: “I can just look down that row of whales, just going into the distance, they’re all dead.”<br />
“You can see the families, you can see the old ones, they’ve got some little ones here too”.</p>
<p>Environmentalists are concerned because the large amounts of decomposing whale could endanger the area’s wildlife and the local prawn harvest.<br />
Some of the whales will be buried, and some will be carried out to sea.</p>
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