News

The video below from National Geographic shows slow-motion video of goblin sharks gobbling food in this very alien way. So what is that giant beak used for? Shark snouts in general have sensors on ...
the goblin shark occupies depths up to 4265 feet where looks aren’t a priority. A much bigger item on the species’s evolutionary agenda is finding sustenance. Food is hard to come by that far ...
At top, the suspicious specimen photo. Below, a picture of an actual, verified goblin shark. Screenshot: Giannis Papadakis / Nicolas Straube / Mediterranean Marine Science / Gizmodo A deep-sea ...
But recently, scientists reported the discovery of what they said was a goblin shark that had washed ashore on a Greek beach. Their announcement of the find last year in the journal Mediterranean ...
The goblin shark is one of the strangest animals in the ... Geographic shows slow-motion video of goblin sharks gobbling food in this very alien way. There’s limited information about goblin ...