A sleeper shark has been captured by an underwater camera for the first time in the Antarctic Ocean. The report by the ...
A barnacle evolved into a parasite and drills into sharks in the deep waters of Norway to feed and survive in silence.
The first shark ever documented in Antarctic waters was captured on camera at 1,600 feet deep in near-freezing temperatures.
Screenshot from the footage of a sleeper shark seen in Antarctica's waters. Minderoo-UWA Deep-Sea Research Centre. Sharks are ancient creatures—even older than land dinosaurs— ...
Filmed in January 2025, the camera operated by the Minderoo-UWA Deep-Sea Research Centre was positioned off the South Shetland Islands near the Antarctic Peninsula.
Jessica Kolbusz — an oceanographer at the Minderoo-University of Western Australia Deep-Sea Research Center — spotted an ...
The rush to mine the deep ocean is no longer a distant possibility. It’s here, thanks to global demand for minerals like cobalt and nickel rising, meaning governments and corporations are eyeing the ...
A man took it upon himself to drop a special camera to the bottom of the Bali Sea, with the experiment discovering something ...
Sleeper sharks are known for slow metabolism and scavenging in frigid environments. The post Shark spotted deep in Antarctica’s freezing waters for first time appeared first on Talker.