The Minderoo-UWA Deep-Sea Research Centre operates the camera that filmed the shark taking its time to pass through the 1,600-feet deep water. Also on display in the video is a skate — a shark ...
NEW YORK (AP) — Six planets are linking up in the sky at the end of February, and most will be visible to the naked eye. It’s what’s known as a planetary parade, which happens when multiple planets ...
Sharks are ancient creatures—even older than land dinosaurs —and they’ve evolved to swim in almost all the world’s ocean waters. Still, many scientists suspected that the animals didn’t live in ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Global first: A massive sleeper shark was filmed in cold Antarctic waters
A bulky shape drifted through dim water nearly half a kilometer below the Antarctic surface, moving slowly over a pale seabed ...
The first shark ever documented in Antarctic waters was captured on camera at 1,600 feet deep in near-freezing temperatures.
A juvenile great white shark was captured off the coast of Spain, leading researchers to investigate further and confirm the species’ rare but ongoing presence in the Spanish Mediterranean. On April ...
Sleeper sharks live extraordinarily long lives and can thrive in near-freezing ocean temperatures near Earth's poles.
The first shark ever documented in Antarctic waters was captured on camera at 1,600 feet deep in near-freezing temperatures.
Digital Camera World on MSN
Underwater camera films shark in Antarctic Ocean, thought to be a world first
Deep-sea researchers capture world-first footage of a sleeper shark in near-freezing Antarctic waters ...
A deep-sea camera captured the first-ever shark recorded in Antarctic waters - a 10- to 13-foot sleeper shark swimming 1,608 feet below the surface.
Researchers spotted a shark off the Antarctic Peninsula for the first time ever, swimming at a depth so deep the sun could not reach it.
Morning Overview on MSN
Marine biologists stunned as giant shark spotted in forbidden Antarctic waters
A team of deep-sea researchers captured video of a sleeper shark prowling nearly 500 meters below the surface near Antarctica’s South Shetland Islands in January 2025, marking the first time the ...
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