When sperm whales need a nap, they take a deep breath, dive down about 45 feet and arrange themselves into perfectly-level, vertical patterns. They sleep sound and still for up to two hours at a time between breaths, in pods of five or six whales, possibly for protection.
No one knew whales slept vertically until a 2008 study documented this behavior. And no one captured really good photography of it in the wild until 2017.
It’s not entirely weird that they move horizontally and sleep vertically when you consider that we move vertically and sleep horizontally.