23 Biggest Deep Sea Mysteries



Did you know Colossal Squids can grow up to 50 ft in length? From the mysterious Mariana Trench shark to creepy fish that look human, these are the 23 Biggest Deep Sea Mysteries ! #10 … Terrible Claw Lobster -- This tiny creature was discovered in 2007, in the deep ocean off the Philippine coast. Hardly anything is known about them yet, except they have two different sizes of knife and claw. The one longer claw is actually as long as the creature’s body itself. #9 … Angler Fish -- This deep-sea creature is fairly well known for a deep sea denizen. So what’s it’s angle? The fish has an appendage growing out of its forehead that has a light on the tip. It uses this to attract prey, then devours them with its gaping mouth. #8 … Sulfur Lake -- Located on the Pacific Ring of Fire, this lake is notable for two features: It’s actually located underwater and it’s made entirely of molten sulfur. This area is teeming with creatures that seem uniquely designed for this location, like crabs and shrimp. #7 … Vampire Squid -- This bizarre creature doesn’t have fangs but it can put on a light show. It produces its own light through spots on its side and through glowing tentacle tips. When threatened, the Vampire Squid will eject an ink that glows. #6 … Frilled Shark -- Because they’ve been around so long, this animal is sometimes referred to as a living fossil because it’s changed so little over millions of years. Known for a mouth filled with 300 backward-facing, trident-shaped teeth aligned in 25 rows, it can consume prey half as long as its body. It prefers depths around 4200 feet, so it’s rarely seen. But one was captured in Japan in 2007. #5 … Alaskan Whale Deaths -- 30 whales beached themselves on Alaskan shores in 2015, and 29 of them were fin whales. Toxic algae was ruled out as the cause of death, since no other species stranded themselves on shore. Experts believe that all the whales died at the same time, but the mystery of this mass whale death still remains unsolved. A full-fledged investigation is expected to take years to complete. #4 … Milky Seas -- Sailors in the past told stories of encountering “milky, glowing waters”. In 1995, a British merchant ship documented that the waters appeared pale and milky-white. Scientists have determined that the cause of the glow is luminous bacteria. The bacteria starts lighting up in order to attract fish. Once the bacteria is ingested, the bacteria can live inside the animals. #3 … Mariana Trench Mystery Shark -- It’s a misnomer because footage of this shark was actually taken in Suruga (soo-gear-uh) Bay in Japan. And estimates that it measured 60-feet long turned out to be false, as was the notion it could be a Megalodon. It’s thought that this is either a six gill shark, which can grow up to 25 feet … or a Pacific sleeper shark, which can survive at depths as low as 9,000 feet. #2 … Giant Oar fish -- This creature can reach lengths up to 56 feet, and weigh up to 600 pounds. These creatures are largely unknown, but are thought to have been the reason for many sightings of sea serpents. Living in deep waters, Oar fish don’t spend much time on the surface. But in 2013, two of the animals made news when they washed ashore on California beaches. Scientists think that strong currents pushed the fish toward shore and they were battered to death by swells. #1 … Colossal Squids -- They can grow to nearly 50 feet long with 10 arms and eyes over a foot in diameter. These deep sea dwelling creatures are the largest known invertebrate in the world. Not a whole lot is known about them, but evidence suggests they’re loners and eat an enormous quantity of large fish. The largest colossal squid ever captured really lived up to its name: It weighed almost 1,100 pounds and was caught in New Zealand in 2007. Subscribe to Epic Wildlife http://goo.gl/6rzs5u Let's Connect -- http://www.epicadamwildlife.com/ -- http://www.facebook.com/epicadamwildlife -- http://www.twitter.com/epicwildlife -- http://gplus.to/epicwildlife

Comments

  1. wow
  2. sorry but the squid pic ones is confirmed photoshopped.
    its actually a whale in the pics.
  3. Firm business fine perfectly juror advantage win future
  4. 23 smallest deep sea mystries
  5. i always wonder why i watch things like these at 2am
  6. battle snails
  7. Thanks for Sharing :)
  8. I came face to face with a giant ray off of Frazer Island in Australia some years ago.  The visibility was a perfect 80 feet or so.  I was free diving for shells in calm water near a channel.  Upon rising calmly I looked up to be face to face with a Sea Ray that was approximately 35-50 feet in width.  It had a hooded face similar to the smaller ones that sting and hunt fish.  I remained calm and froze,,, memorizing the image.  It turned abruptly and what trailed was a tail as think as a large power cable .... the tail was approximately 65-80 foot in length and at the end was a large piece of flesh shaped almost like a perfect rectangle.  I have spoken to oceanographers and sea life experts since this time and no one has been able to identify this species.  Please contact me if you can help me identify what I saw !  My name is Gavin Glimm and I can be found very easily on Facebook by searching my name.  Thanks all !!!! GAv
  9. .... dang, from kitchen video, now i'm here with this deep sea mystery
  10. The later one was sow in 2007 where I was born
  11. Number 3 was called the bascin shark and they feed of plankton
  12. he got a lot wrong
  13. Is this Narrator half australian or something? He sounds like a yank trying to speak Australian but sounding Kiwi.
  14. that was a pic of a dead whale, not a colossal squid.
  15. Fish are so dumb when they see light they go after it and the glowing bacteria they eat OOOOO SHINEY IMMA GO AND GET IT Just like cats
  16. nearly 0 Scientists think the bloop is a living creature.
  17. L
  18. taken aback
  19. Also please use metric system, like 98% of the world's countries!
  20. nature's wonders.


Additional Information:

Visibility: 792490

Duration: 9m 14s

Rating: 2160