In this video, we’ll learn about just how big great white sharks really are and how scientists can use their teeth to ...
New research suggests that the prehistoric megalodon, the biggest shark known to have existed, was even larger than we ...
Megalodon may have been up to 80 feet long, but the colossal extinct shark was also probably thinner than scientists ...
Megalodon have always been compared to the modern great white shark. Scientists have found a reason why it shouldn't be.
MEGALODON may have grown to a staggering 80 feet in length – and weighted 94 tons. The staggering size of the prehistoric ...
If Meg 3 ever happens, the filmmakers might need to ditch the oversized great white shark trope. A new study published in ...
A Saint John auction house has opened online bidding on a collection of megalodon shark teeth that are millions of years old.
What’s more, he and his coauthors posit that megalodon was slenderer than previously thought, closer in build to a sleek lemon shark than a chunky great white, according to the study published ...
Megalodon was likely a long, streamlined predator, not a bulky giant. Scientists compared its bones with modern sharks.
The teeth of megalodon sharks are similar to that of modern-day great white sharks, as both are similarly serrated. This led scientists to believe that the megalodon resembled a great white.
The new study also proposes that the megalodon’s young could have been born up to 13 feet long, far larger than previously ...
It's often thought that the megalodon would've looked a lot like a great white shark, but bigger. But scientists now think the enormous creature looked "closer in shape to a lemon shark or even a ...