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Sharks have a reputation for being some of the most fearsome predators in the ocean. The sight of a great white’s gaping maw ...
The frilled shark’s mouth is just as terrifying as the maw of a great white: It’s lined with 25 rows of backward-facing, trident-shaped teeth—300 in all. “The teeth are constructed for ...
needle-like teeth—hundreds and hundreds of them, each forked into three nasty prongs. Such is the grotesque mouth of the frilled shark, surely one of the more bizarre sharks in the sea.
combined with the teeth, give the mouth an all-around frightening look. It's unlikely you will ever come face-to-face with a living frilled shark. But if you do, it's safe to say: Keep as far away ...
With its eerie, prehistoric features and elusive nature, the frilled shark is often called an alien of the deep sea – and for ...
The world may seem like it’s in shambles, but ocean scientists are having quite a run. Over the last year, the ocean has periodically belched up prehistoric deep sea creatures for photographing ...
To survive the deep ocean, sea creatures need all kinds of adaptations that give them alien-like appearances, like huge eyes ...
Sink your teeth into this. A little-known frilled shark has been found off the Algarve coast in Portugal by scientists, who were conducting research on minimising unwanted catches in European ...
It uses quick lunges to sink those teeth into other sharks, fish, octopuses and squid. Humans know very little about the frilled shark because it lives deep in the ocean, off the coasts of Japan ...
While its peers, such as the Tyrannosaurus rex and triceratops, died out long ago, this shark, with its frilled teeth and long, slim body still swims at great depths of at least 700 metres (2,300 ...
The frilled shark—a roughly five-foot long fish with 300 teeth—was plucked by a trawler from more than 2,000 feet below the surface. Speaking with Portuguese outlet SIC Noticisas TV ...
A terrifying prehistoric shark which has 300 razor sharp teeth has been caught by a group ... The dark brown two-metre long fish is a frilled shark, which is also known as the 'living fossil'.