Megalodon Is Still Alive
The biggest Great White Shark ever discovered and reliably measured was a 20 foot (6.4 meter) long, 7,330 lb (3,320 kg) shark found off the waters of Cuba in 1945. Yet even larger sharks have reportedly been caught: one in South Australia in 1870 measured at 36 feet (10.97 meters), and another measuring 37 feet (11.28 meters) - though both have been dismissed by biologists due to the sheer size, claiming it's impossible .Great Whites could grow that big. Yet what if those sharks caught were real and not just fish stories, and what if they weren't necessarily Great Whites
Today we're taking a look at the Megalodon shark and asking the question: does it still
live?
Most scientists believe the Megalodon went extinct around 2 million years ago- and that's
good news for anybody who enjoys taking dips in the ocean as these monsters grew to sizes
up to 59 feet in length (18 meters) and sported teeth seven inches (18 cm) long!
As the largest predatory fish to have ever lived, the Megalodon fed on a variety of prey,
but its preferred prey was without a doubt whales.
By examining the remains of fossilized whale skeletons that bear the scars of a Megalodon
attack, scientists have been able to learn a lot about its hunting strategies. While a Great White prefers to ambush prey with a single bite and then let it bleed out, the Megalodon would attack the tough bony portions of its prey such as shoulders, flippers, rib cage and upper spine, crushing bone and rupturing organs. A single bite to a whale's backbone could paralyze the animal, leaving the Megalodon to feed at its leisure- and with a bite force between 24,400 and 41,000 pounds (11,068 – 18597 kg) crushing tough whale bones would have been a simple task for the giant shark.
But Megalodons didn't just eat whales- as opportunistic hunters they would prey on seals, sea lions, dolphins and generally anything smaller than itself (which made nearly the entire ocean fair game)- paleontologists have even discovered the shattered shells of giant sea turtles bearing the tell-tale scars of Megalodon attack!
For decades scientists have assumed that Megalodon died out towards the start of the latest ice
age, theorizing that because like modern sharks it was unable to regulate its body temperature, cooling waters eventually led to extinction.
Yet a 2016 study showed that there seemed to be no correlation between climate change
and Megalodon's decline, instead linking the giant shark's extinction to the rise of smaller,
more agile predators and the decline of large prey such as filter-feeding whales which began
dying off around the same time
This new discovery has been groundbreaking for believers in Megalodon's continued survival,
as mainstream science has long held that because Megalodon lived exclusively in warm waters
that it could not have survived through the ice age like the Great White did, which frequents
cold waters.
If cooling climate didn't cause the Megalodon to go extinct though, could a small, relic
population have retreated to deeper waters in search of large enough prey to sustain
it?
This is the most commonly held theory on Megalodon's continued survival, with proponents pointing
at recent discoveries in Great White behavior that show the sharks regularly dive to very
deep depths in search of food.
With Giant Squid thought to grow up to 43 feet (13 meters), Megalodon may have found a suitable prey in the deepest depths. If forced to hunt large squid, it would explain why Megalodon is unknown to science- the first live Giant Squid ever filmed was only caught as recently as 2012, and with a tiny fraction of the oceans explored by mankind there's no telling what else is out there. Proponents for the Megalodon's survival also point at the recent discoveries of other fish thought to be extinct for millions of years such as the Megamouth Shark, discovered alive and well in 1976
The Coelacanth, a bizarre-looking fish was thought extinct for a whopping 65 million years, until one was fished up in 1938. So could a Megalodon still be alive somewhere in the deepest oceans today? Is there any evidence?
In 1875 the HMS Challenger out on a deep-sea expedition dredged up a pair of Megalodon
teeth which were later dated as being 10,000 to 15,000 years old.
This moves the date up for the last living Megalodon to just before the start of human
civilization, and if one Megalodon survived past the Ice Age, then it's not a stretch of the imagination to believe that others did too and may continue to thrive in the deepest depths.
Unfortunately because shark skeletons are made of cartilage which quickly disintegrates in sea water, only teeth survive a Megalodon's death, so the odds of finding teeth from modern Megalodons lurking in extremely deep water are astronomically low.
Yet eyewitness accounts describing giant sharks abound throughout human history, and while most are likely nothing more than tall tales or fish stories, the sheer number of them begs the suggestion that there may be some truth to them.
In 1918 Australian naturalist David Stead recorded that a group of local fishermen refused
to go back out to sea after encountering a shark of incredible proportions. Per Stead's notes, the fishermen of Port Stephens reported working at their fishing grounds in deep water when suddenly an enormous, ghostly white shark rose from the depths and attacked their crayfish pots, devouring the 3 foot 6 inch (1.06 meters) pots and the crayfish inside whole
The giant shark destroyed their tackle and the men returned to port raving about a 100 foot shark, refusing to go back to sea for several days. While Stead notes that the measurement was obviously impossible, he does go on to say that he was familiar with the fishermen for many years and that they were “stolid men, not given to 'fish stories' nor even talking about their catches'. Mr. Stead also notes that all the fishermen involved were experienced men well used to sighting whales and even great whites, yet the men were in a state of outright fear and panic upon returning to shore.
This would not be the only sighting of a possible Megalodon off the coasts of Australia, with
the crew of a fishing vessel in the 1960s reporting their own encounter with a giant
shark.
Initially reluctant to speak about it for fear of being teased, they- along with their Captain- admitted to seeing a gargantuan white shark swim past their 85 foot (26 meters) boat, claiming that it rivaled their own ship in size.
All men involved were familiar with whales and steadfastly denied the creature being a whale, though most telling of all may possibly be the fact that this giant shark’s skin
so closely matched the ghostly white complexion of the 1918 sighting.
Sightings of giant sharks have been reported across the Pacific and as far east as the
Mexican coast.
While fear and the water can certainly play tricks on the mind, before you dismiss any
of these claims of Megalodon's existence it's important to remember that only until recently
did modern science accept the existence of squids large enough to eat men- and only 6 years ago was one finally caught on tape!
Could Megalodon still lurk in the deepest depths, having learned to hunt large prey
in the abyss?
Unlikely as Otodus Megalodon lived near the surface. It also could not survive at the pressure down so far to hunt giant squid. Also the Megalodon teeth that were found in Ice 11,000 years ago have been disproved countless times. Lastly Megalodon was not invincible, obviously smaller and faster predators would outcompete a shark that weighed 50 tons and only moved in short bursts of speed. The Coelacanth is also only like a few meters long, Megalodon was long as a bus. In conclusion this article is based purely on skepticism, rumours, outdated material, and not on proper scientific fact.
ReplyDeleteAlso heres a video to watch to debunk all that
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ZtH8gB258o&t=599s