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Ancient Squid 'Beak' Fossils Found on Cretaceous Rocks Reveal They Dominated the Oceans In The Dinosaur Era A collection of ...
Scientists on a research expedition in the Southern Ocean captured the first footage of a living Gonatus antarcticus squid. The colorful, three-foot squid species was only known to scientists ...
Although the team’s stated goal is to capture footage of an adult colossal squid in its natural environment, according to ...
A man paddleboarding with his friends is shocked to see a squid wrapping its tentacles around his paddleboard and pulling him ...
An elusive deep-sea squid species was caught on camera for the first time ever in a major breakthrough. National Geographic, on June 10, revealed the "history-making sighting" of a massive, three ...
Live colossal squid, super-heavyweight of the deep sea, caught on video for the first time. A juvenile colossal squid is seen at a depth of nearly 2,000 feet in the South Atlantic Ocean.
Squid eyes are like human eyes since they have two camera-type eyes. However, they have photoreceptors at the front of the eye, instead of at the back, allowing them to see in dimly lit ocean waters.
An expedition spotted a baby of the species in the South Sandwich Islands. This cephalopod can grow to more than 20 feet and has proved elusive in its deep-sea environs.
Deep-sea squid avoid lights. Alex Hayward, senior lecturer at the University of Exeter in England, told National Geographic that deep-sea squids have good eyesight and usually avoid the lights of ...
The footage was caught by a deep-sea vessel known as SuBastian. The vessel dropped 7,000 feet through the ocean on Christmas morning, stumbling upon a deep-sea quid species.
Images from the exciting encounter, which occurred 2152 meters (1.34 miles) deep in the Weddell Sea, show the vibrantly-colored squid with scratches and sucker marks on its body.
The Gonatus antarcticus squid, found only in the waters around Antarctica, was spotted at a depth of approx. 2152 meters in the Weddell Sea.