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Anyone knowing sharks...?
I know how huge whale-sharks can become (if that is what they are named in English), and I know about their white points.
I also know of what in German is called "Riesenhai" (giant shark), and saw poctures. But what kind of monster is this? Both sharks I mentioned before do not seem to fit the visual appearance of the shark in this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RTKzrVv7I_o The rumour, that Megalodons have survived somewhere deep in the pacific, persists stubbornly. In modern times, especially in Japan time and again witnesses report of having seen "incredibly huge sharks that were no whalesharks". I do not say this is a Megalodon. I am just curious if anybody knows what this beast is. |
The audio track tells me it's Sharkzilla :88)
Seriously, we're lacking a lot of details here though. I think it may definitely be true that, well, stuff is out there - the giant squid catches and a lot of new species of deep see life discovered in the Antarctic recently suggest that a lot still remails unexplored. But that video certainly doesn't tell me much. |
Somebody had commented that it is a Greenland shark.
http://www.marinebiodiversity.ca/sha.../greenland.htm http://www.marinebiodiversity.ca/sha...o%20161web.jpg |
Maybe a basking shark? They are huge sharks (but not as big as a whale shark). They feed on plankton, and are rather scary-looking :D.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basking_shark http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c1...king_shark.jpg |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_sleeper_shark
Its a pacific sleeper shark, a little known deep sea shark closely related to the Greenland shark. It can grow to huge sizes (normally 4 meters) but is rarely caught because it lives in deep waters. The video is from 1990, and the shark was estimated to be 7 meters long, so its large for a sleeper sharks. Apparently the giant shark was a minor sensation ("sommerloch?") in Japan in 1990 and now made a happy comeback thanks to youtube. Back then the japanese tabloids made a megalodon out of it. Prof. Eugenie Clark (one of the world's leading shark experts) made the estimate of "23 feet". Japanese tabloids made 23 meters out of that instead of 7, and so the Sharkzilla was born :D |
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Agreed, it's a sleeper shark. Harmless and rarely seen/photographed as they remain at depth which is why they have a 6th gill in comparison to other sharks which have 5.
Although much of the ocean is uncharted and a mystery to us, I'm sure we would have witnessed Megalodons by now. http://www.fossilien.de/seiten/haizaehne/megalodon.htm Man, I love sharks, they scare the sh*t out of me though. http://i149.photobucket.com/albums/s...hite-shark.jpg |
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This set is amazing :huh:: http://www.jostimages.com/galerie/sh...ite-shark.html
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Megladon was known to travel into shallows in chase of its prey. It definitely does not exist in this world anymore. Seen the BC fossils though (On TV as they were being removed).
-S |
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00AUOO7BgBU&NR=1
Megaladon CGI style. Quote:
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But a fascinating field naval biology is, and naval geography and geology as well. In the late days of my schoolyears I even considered "Ozeanographie" as an option to study at university. but although I was interested in diving, I hated and still hate swimming , soooo... . I absolutely hate swimming. Totally. Completely. If somebody wants to nget rid of me he just needs to suggest that we go swimming. Some people go swimming, others leave and never come back. :lol: |
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