Shark size comparison Living Extinct

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 19. 12. 2021

Komentáře • 3,4K

  • @dariugrinov9472
    @dariugrinov9472 Před 2 lety +13439

    they definitely hit him with the "oh so you like sharks, name every shark"

    • @danielawesome36
      @danielawesome36 Před 2 lety +433

      *points gun* "Name them."

    • @mr.creeperman6034
      @mr.creeperman6034 Před 2 lety +122

      Name every bomb *then*

    • @nickkorkodylas5005
      @nickkorkodylas5005 Před 2 lety +114

      Far from perfect but vastly better than most videos featuring Megalodon. Loved the Eorhincodon inclusion since it's very hard to find size estimation even online, though in my opinion the olive green color is most likely off, if I was to guess I'd say it was transitional between a modern Whale Shark and it's closest living relative, baby zebra sharks (babies tend to be morphologically more basal than their adults and in this specific case on can see how juveniles' zebra-pattern is more similar to whale shark's nightsky pattern than adult zebra sharks' cheetah-like pattern).

    • @Secret_Identity_4841
      @Secret_Identity_4841 Před 2 lety +12

      Oh god💀

    • @czero21
      @czero21 Před 2 lety +15

      Underrated

  • @applesauce155
    @applesauce155 Před rokem +1771

    Such well behaved sharks, lining up to get their photos taken.

    • @adrianrodriguezjr.4050
      @adrianrodriguezjr.4050 Před rokem +31

      @@jewelsofjuly7377 rude

    • @crispiio
      @crispiio Před rokem +88

      it's a shark school photo day

    • @noza7535
      @noza7535 Před rokem

      They are jpgs dumbo

    • @Mcyeet69
      @Mcyeet69 Před rokem +5

      @@jewelsofjuly7377 imagine not having a father they were behaving very well in de pics

    • @joefes7409
      @joefes7409 Před rokem +3

      They be lining up like schoolkids

  • @captainfruitpunch8913
    @captainfruitpunch8913 Před rokem +198

    Fun fact about greenland sharks, they have been found to be one of the longest living animals in the world, with one individual estimated to be over 400 years old. They reach sexual maturity at around 150 years old.

    • @SkylerDemness
      @SkylerDemness Před 8 měsíci +8

      Wow, I didn't expect them to live that long!

    • @mochardiansah7452
      @mochardiansah7452 Před měsícem +13

      And most of them are blind before even reaching maturity

    • @user-kd3lb9nr6c
      @user-kd3lb9nr6c Před měsícem +4

      Blud was born when when ur mum was 20

    • @gameringchannel5156
      @gameringchannel5156 Před 17 dny +3

      for a second i thought you meant like length of body lol
      i just imagine a 400-meter stretched shark

    • @not_helios
      @not_helios Před 10 dny +1

      they also commonly have parasites hanging from thwir eyes which is part of the reason they are most often blind

  • @mr_clean575
    @mr_clean575 Před rokem +106

    Can we just appreciate the fact that Whale Sharks have harmless baby teeth and are friendly puppers.

  • @ethant2582
    @ethant2582 Před 2 lety +4592

    Man heavy respect to the scuba diver for risking his life to get us a size comparison with those deadly sharks 😬

    • @shairometro6276
      @shairometro6276 Před 2 lety +308

      I respect his bravery,he ordered all the sharks to be in a line ,and one by one come and have a photoshoot with him

    • @thatoneguy9666
      @thatoneguy9666 Před rokem +53

      He commands respect

    • @bluebeka2458
      @bluebeka2458 Před rokem +34

      I was like: "Ok bro, you need to stop playing with the sharks and go home. When a next to you shark is as big as a mini van, i think is safe to say that you are pretty much boned if they notice you." 😅

    • @tarnishedofnorenown387
      @tarnishedofnorenown387 Před rokem +56

      I paused the video so he can get a breather. Must be hard lining up all those sharks

    • @Alsaela
      @Alsaela Před rokem

      Deadly????? You're more likely to die from a vending machine accident than killed by a shark. Plus, if a shark bites you (not including the bull shark) its trying to figure out what you are. Dogs use their noses, cats use their whiskers, sharks use their mouths. They'll take a quick bite then they'll swim around you then most likely swim off.

  • @holleysdotcom
    @holleysdotcom Před 2 lety +6500

    I can honestly say, I had no idea there were so many different species of sharks. Nicely done.

    • @dennoch8637
      @dennoch8637 Před 2 lety +71

      Me too 😂

    • @constantinehunter1322
      @constantinehunter1322 Před 2 lety +288

      and there are still a lot of species and sub species not listed here, cant blame the creator for that the video would be about 6hrs long lol great video tho.

    • @channelgigas7042
      @channelgigas7042  Před 2 lety +528

      6 hours😅

    • @pmxiwastaken
      @pmxiwastaken Před 2 lety +11

      Same here

    • @jonas8993
      @jonas8993 Před 2 lety +85

      most animals have a crazy amount of sub species. Because species don't suddenly appear. All the time theres mutations, so species that exist for a long time have hundred variants or more

  • @manunu9762
    @manunu9762 Před rokem +161

    I’m mostly amazed at how they got all these extinct sharks here, let alone get them all to line up without moving. Massive credits to the diver, camera man and the rest of the team who put together this amazing video.

  • @GoofBean
    @GoofBean Před 8 měsíci +61

    I’m bored, so here are fun facts about sharks:
    -The small scales on sharks are known as “Denticles”. They are very sharp, and different species denticles look very different to one another under microscopes.
    -The top 4 most dangerous sharks, based off attacks on people, are the great white, the tiger, the bull, and the oceanic whitetip Shark.
    -tiger sharks have been found with things such as pillows, armour, number plates, and even land animal remains, likely thrown in by boats.
    -there have only been a few megamouth sharks ever washed up, and one is at the Fremantle Maratime Museum in Western Australia. I have seen it lots of times myself.
    -many scientists think that the bull Shark is more dangerous than the great white, because they live close to shore, near humans, and in murky water, where it is very difficult to see them. They usually escape unseen after attacks.
    -tiger sharks and sand tiger sharks are not related. The great white is closer related to the sand tiger Shark than the actual tiger shark. Funny coincidence, huh?
    -only 6 known species live dominantly in rivers. They are very rare.
    -the smallest Shark, the dwarf lantern shark, is the size of a banana, but the whale shark can grow up to 20 metres, the size of 2 school buses.
    -there have only been a few great whites successfully put in captivity, and survived. Most great whites die the first few days of captivity.
    -tiger sharks actually get bigger than great whites on average.
    -cookie cutter sharks take bites of things that are very small, like mackerel, but also massive creatures like whales. They even bite underwater cables and SUBMARINES!
    -cookie cutter sharks are actually parasites, as they feed on living creatures, and they rarely die after attacks, just missing a bit of flesh.
    Anyways, that’s all for now, hope you enjoyed😊
    Edit: I’m still bored, so I’ll try and name every shark I can- great white, tiger shark, bull shark, sand tiger, frilled shark, horn shark, wobbegong, epeualette, cookie cutter, lantern shark, basking shark, megamouth, shortfin mako, longfin mako, goblin shark, catshark, dogfish, sawshark, greenland, roughshark, salmon shark, porbeagle shark, six gill shark, sleeper shark, seven gill shark, spinner shark, dusky shark, reef shark (all types), great hammerhead, scalloped hammerhead, speartooth shark, crocodile shark, lemon shark, night shark, whale shark, bronze whaler, gummy shark, angleshark, port- Jackson shark, weasel shark, zebra shark, leopard shark, thresher shark, blue shark, and I’m done, I can’t think of any more. Hope you enjoyed, comment a shark that I missed (alive today)😊. Thanks

    • @GoofBean
      @GoofBean Před 8 měsíci +7

      Nurse shark

    • @zakaryloreto6526
      @zakaryloreto6526 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Really interesting, never knew about freshwater sharks until your comment. Sadly they live in some of most polluted rivers such as the Ganges.

    • @asteroid_arrokoth_is_cool
      @asteroid_arrokoth_is_cool Před 2 měsíci +1

      I KNEW THAT FROM MY BOOK

    • @brandontee9837
      @brandontee9837 Před měsícem +1

      Last time I have read shark Book

  • @Iguana5k
    @Iguana5k Před 2 lety +5110

    The fact that so many of those huge extinct sharks had spines on their fins kinda concerns me.
    Many small fish have similar spines as a defense mechanism to not get eaten whole...

    • @SilverusX
      @SilverusX Před 2 lety +810

      These are stock photos. We only have teeth and in rare occasions some spines but thats it. I doubt that those sharks looked like those stock images.

    • @Hazelnutlikessharks
      @Hazelnutlikessharks Před 2 lety +407

      Chances are they used them for combat but these are not accurate due to the fact they are just theories on how the shark would've looked since we only have fossils

    • @npc2.010
      @npc2.010 Před 2 lety +393

      @@Hazelnutlikessharks even worse, we only found teeth

    • @Tepix25
      @Tepix25 Před 2 lety +47

      Bluegill are the only fish I’ve seen and caught that have the most spikes I’ve ever seen

    • @danielawesome36
      @danielawesome36 Před 2 lety +443

      @@npc2.010 "Let's have our bones be made of cartilage just to mess with future historians."
      "What's a historian?"
      "Doesn't matter. Lets'."

  • @RosiePosie-el3lj
    @RosiePosie-el3lj Před 2 lety +1358

    ... You know, of all the songs one could play when showing us the largest sharks in history, I did not expect an instrumental version of Dschinghis Khan's Moskau.

  • @MPdude237
    @MPdude237 Před rokem +28

    Towards the end, I thought all larger sharks were extinct, so I was surprised with the Basking Shark and the Whale Shark being still living sharks and making it that high on the list.

    • @AYO_TF_Sideswipe
      @AYO_TF_Sideswipe Před měsícem

      Don't forget Great White, Tiger Shark, Great Hammerhead, Bull Shark, Thresher Shark. They are big

    • @Xmaster-bh8wb
      @Xmaster-bh8wb Před 17 dny

      @@AYO_TF_Sideswipehe meant after they all showed up, there’s always a transition to where the scuba diver swims away from all the smaller sharks and shrinks, that was the very last section. But yeah, I didn’t expect the great hammerhead shark to be larger than the great white!

    • @AYO_TF_Sideswipe
      @AYO_TF_Sideswipe Před 17 dny

      @Xmaster-bh8wb It's not. Some of these are innacurate. That Great Hammerhead was probably a big female, and the great white was probably a small male. Great white is 3rd biggest shark. Great hammer head is like 6th whih is below the tiger shark

    • @AYO_TF_Sideswipe
      @AYO_TF_Sideswipe Před 17 dny

      @@Xmaster-bh8wb Ah

    • @AYO_TF_Sideswipe
      @AYO_TF_Sideswipe Před 17 dny

      @@Xmaster-bh8wb no wonder

  • @royalvoyagers
    @royalvoyagers Před rokem +7

    Extremely appreciate the time taken to produce such quality work. Its fun to observe the morphologic changes over evolution. Besides, really like the background opera.

  • @ProtiumPower
    @ProtiumPower Před 2 lety +2516

    We are fortunate to witness 2nd largest shark.
    Fun fact: Sharks only leave their teeth as fossils, so we don't know exactly what extinct sharks really looked like.

    • @Dman9fp
      @Dman9fp Před 2 lety +443

      There's several that have been preserved full body, like hybodus, orthacanthus, falcatus, etc Bear gulch formation weird sharks, etc. but yeah wayyy rare. Vast majority are just known by their teeth yes

    • @mere8593
      @mere8593 Před 2 lety +238

      @@Dman9fp there are many microscopic features on them which can be examined to reveal muscle attachment points. This gives an idea of the size and placement of the musculature, and forensic reconstruction.

    • @tiberius0716
      @tiberius0716 Před rokem +72

      Yeah because at 4:49 one shark doesn't have color. I expect the color is unknown *yet*

    • @ZyXor_
      @ZyXor_ Před rokem +17

      Its the same with dinosaurs lol

    • @xeox4280
      @xeox4280 Před rokem +2

      Thats not a real shark

  • @Iguana5k
    @Iguana5k Před 2 lety +1185

    Its crazy how many (even big ones) sharks are there that I never heard about.
    And I watched my fair share of ocean documentarys. Almost feels like every documentary shows the same 5 to ten species of sharks, and noone bothers to show more species.

    • @thomaslikescars
      @thomaslikescars Před 2 lety +56

      Well, location of very important. If you are watching a documentary about the Pacific ocean you won't see something like the Greenland shark. Many sharks and fish stick to one single location as that's where their niche is.

    • @Iguana5k
      @Iguana5k Před 2 lety +37

      @@thomaslikescars Yeah probably. Also it might be that some sharks are just very hard to get footage of.
      blacktip, hammerheads and tiger sharks seem to be often near reefs or rock formations where theres plenty of other stuff to film in case they dont show up.

    • @ChrisLovesCars
      @ChrisLovesCars Před 2 lety +11

      Yeah I’ve never heard of mega mouth when I was 8 now I’m 9

    • @thomaslikescars
      @thomaslikescars Před 2 lety +18

      @@ChrisLovesCars aren't you a little young to watch CZcams? CZcams kids is meant for your age.

    • @ChrisLovesCars
      @ChrisLovesCars Před 2 lety +15

      @@thomaslikescars shh I’m 20 now

  • @Zero-uo7ky
    @Zero-uo7ky Před 6 měsíci +6

    great hammerheads are actually critically endangered and not least concern ( 13:00 )
    they get hunted for their big dorsal fin a lot and their population is decreasing worldwide

  • @MrNuts70
    @MrNuts70 Před rokem +16

    12:47 The Great White or otherwise known as Carcharodon carcharias is easy to miss,
    if you think or expect (as I did) that it would be in the final category for size.
    Just putting the time stamp in to really hammer in how it wasn't near the end of the video!!!

    • @aguywhodoesstuff1116
      @aguywhodoesstuff1116 Před rokem +1

      Well... There might be an even bigger shark lurking in the waters... ._.

    • @zamir3773
      @zamir3773 Před rokem

      Vulnerable shark species

  • @braydancoe3390
    @braydancoe3390 Před 2 lety +850

    Amazing that the diver survived all that apparent danger😰

  • @danielrobinson7872
    @danielrobinson7872 Před 2 lety +800

    The Greenland shark is my favorite. They’re so slow and docile that you kind of forget that they could end you in one bite should they be hungry. They just move slowly to conserve energy. They are more than capable of moving quickly to catch their prey.

    • @kaijuar2003
      @kaijuar2003 Před 2 lety +63

      I wouldn't say docile, there's cases where they've actively hunted live seals and even stalked people under the ice.
      Reply made: 4:37 AM Tuesday, May 24 2022

    • @kyoswkyosw1216
      @kyoswkyosw1216 Před 2 lety +93

      I still remember the guy in Maine that jumped in the harbor to study a greenland shark everyone said was there. It was just “doodoodoo” while he measured it and then disappeared into the fog of the water and as he was going back to the dock it sped by his head and he paused and confessed “I always thought these sharks were slow and docile, if it wanted me it could have me and I would be powerless.” Think it was the same documentary where they uncovered they skin animals with their teeth in a corkscrew pattern, like skinning an apple or orange in one go. Researchers kept finding seals especially but also a polar bear with the same wounds

    • @stephenbernat7965
      @stephenbernat7965 Před 2 lety +34

      They also live hundreds of years

    • @kaijuar2003
      @kaijuar2003 Před 2 lety +39

      @@kyoswkyosw1216 It's terrifying when you think about it for a moment.
      I mean, many animals that experts believed were slow and docile turned out to have a rather scary side. For example, many people didn't believe the Slow Loris was a deadly predator until people saw it feeding on smaller vertebrates.
      People even believed sloths were lazy, docile animals. However there was a well documented report where a friendly dog ran up to a sloth and sniffed it where the sloth slashed the throat of the dog.
      Even when there's a newborn, female sloths are pretty fast and chase after would-be predators. There's a video on CZcams where a person tried to check up on the newborn sloth and the mother kept chasing them around and she was not moving at a slow pace either she was actively going after them. One moment they turn and got to the door the next thing before they knew it mother sloth was right on their tail.
      Reply made: 7:04 PM Wednesday, June 1 2022

    • @bluetangsrock938
      @bluetangsrock938 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kaijuar2003 not to mention, Greenland sharks one of the few natural predators of fully grown polar bears

  • @raycavazos8927
    @raycavazos8927 Před rokem +7

    I love the orchestral version of Dshingis Khan Maskau towards the end. Awesome song and that was a cool rendition. Great video all the way through. Thanks for this my friend!

  • @FindTheStickmen
    @FindTheStickmen Před 8 měsíci +20

    A Lot Of Blue Sharks
    1:37 Akmonistion Shark
    4:12 Gummy Shark
    5:09 Leopard Shark
    5:22 Angular roughshark
    5:30 Campolus Shark
    5:51 Nereveous Shark
    6:05 Grey Reef Shark
    7:17 Cobelodus Shark
    7:35 Hybodus
    8:08 Caribbean Reef Shark
    8:51 Creatolamna marocana Shark
    8:55 Broadnose sevengill Shark
    9:00 Silvertip Shark
    9:11 Probeagle Shark
    10:03 Smalltooth Sand Tiger Shark
    10:22 Silky Shark
    10:37 Lemon Shark
    10:41 Galapagos Shark
    10:45 Blue Shark
    10:50 Pelagic thresher Shark
    11:00 Bull Shark
    11:14 Shortfin Mako Shark
    11:23 Dusky Shark
    11:28 Longfin Mako Shark
    11:52 Insurs desori Shark
    11:55 Bigeye Thresher Shark
    12:24 Cardabiodon Shark
    12:30 Crelodus Shark
    12:34 Edestus Giganteus
    12:39 Sarcoprion Shark
    13:07 Common Thresher Shark
    13:12 Seerated Giant Thresher Shark
    14:02 Paratodus benedini Shark
    14:07 Megalolomna Paradoxodon Shark
    14:11 Otodus Angustidens Shark
    14:26 Ptychodus rugosus Shark
    15:07 Ptychodus Gibbelurus Shark
    16:56 Carcharocles aksuaticus Shark
    17:10 Carcharocles megalodon

  • @dawnscript1
    @dawnscript1 Před 2 lety +558

    I never knew how endangered some of these sharks were, especially hammerheads and great whites. This saddens me and I hope something is done about it!

  • @alaxel3222
    @alaxel3222 Před 2 lety +363

    I do feel the need to point out that Stethacanthus technically isn't a shark. It's actually a holocephalian which is the group of fish chimaeras belong to. Still a cool looking fish though and very shark-like in appearance.

    • @xaylink2221
      @xaylink2221 Před 2 lety +11

      No one cares

    • @channelgigas7042
      @channelgigas7042  Před 2 lety +180

      Well the video actually also includes holocephalians because they're closely related

    • @alexkeys776
      @alexkeys776 Před 2 lety +185

      @@xaylink2221 i care

    • @jefferyandbob3137
      @jefferyandbob3137 Před 2 lety +145

      @@xaylink2221 i also care

    • @emlrob337
      @emlrob337 Před 2 lety +25

      Same with the helicoprions - they're an extinct member of the eugeneodontida, with the only (very distant) extant relatives being holocephalians too. It's cool how the appearance of sharks is so pervasive that other groups are automatically placed with them!

  • @joshhoffman2628
    @joshhoffman2628 Před rokem

    this video is so impressive. tons of work went into this. Thank you!

  • @anidiot4992
    @anidiot4992 Před 8 měsíci +3

    i like how one of the critically endangered shark is called the "common" angel shark

  • @januszpolak254
    @januszpolak254 Před 2 lety +617

    Its sad that there is so many cool extinct sharks yet people only talk about Megalodon.

    • @aguywhodoesstuff1116
      @aguywhodoesstuff1116 Před 2 lety +45

      Chernobyl shark

    • @derpiekittie17
      @derpiekittie17 Před 2 lety +41

      Fr. Edestus is 10× scarier than the Megalodon and is big enough to eat a person whole

    • @pHixiq
      @pHixiq Před 2 lety +55

      A lot of it has to do with how sharks fossilize and how hard it is to study them. It’s VERY hard. 90% of what we know from prehistoric sharks come from their teeth. And it’s VERY easy to find megalodon teeth (in Comparison) Because they were so widespread and abundant

    • @michaelcarnevale5620
      @michaelcarnevale5620 Před 2 lety +29

      megalodon is the hugest shark tho he's the king

    • @aguywhodoesstuff1116
      @aguywhodoesstuff1116 Před 2 lety +8

      @@michaelcarnevale5620 scariest*

  • @DizzyRL
    @DizzyRL Před 2 lety +249

    16:22. Imagine being stuck in the ocean and you dive under just to see that thing swimming at you

    • @MewingMaster34
      @MewingMaster34 Před rokem +77

      I will have heart attack even before getting eaten

    • @cliffjumpercc3261
      @cliffjumpercc3261 Před rokem +23

      To be fair it's not a accurate depiction

    • @davidgordy7766
      @davidgordy7766 Před rokem +11

      What's up with that things jaw anyway?

    • @puncake8047
      @puncake8047 Před rokem

      @@davidgordy7766 basically its jaw is a fucking living saw

    • @Sarah-vo2qu
      @Sarah-vo2qu Před rokem +42

      @@davidgordy7766 This is an outdated depiction of the Helicoprion jaw ;) to our current understanding, the spiral of teeth was inside the mouth, mostly covered by flesh in the jaw

  • @Bobdudez1
    @Bobdudez1 Před rokem +3

    Respect to the scuba diver camera man for going back in time and meeting all these sharks

  • @robertnesta23
    @robertnesta23 Před 10 měsíci +8

    Hungry shark world sharks:
    Blacktip reef shark 5:39
    Whitetip reef shark 7:12
    Porgeable shark 9:11
    Blue shark 10:45
    Spikes 1:36
    Sand shark 7:44
    Tresher 11:55
    Smooth hammerhead 12:07
    Heidi 7:54
    Bull shark 11:00
    Goblin shark 13:02
    Mako shark 11:28
    Megamouth 12:19
    Great hammerhead 12:58
    Tiger shark 12:13
    Basking shark 16:32
    Whale shark 17:05
    great white shark 12:47
    Megalodon 17:10

  • @TimJBucci
    @TimJBucci Před 2 lety +368

    4:22 one time I was swimming in the Gulf of Mexico at Galveston, and I swam out to about 10 feet deep because I'd let myself sink and push off of the bottom for air. While I was wading some water I saw this small shark, maybe 3 or 4 feet long, leap up out of the water right next to me and do like a 1080 before coming back down into the water. It was so epic and memorable, but I wanted out of the water after that lol. I thought it was just having fun or trying to get away from me but looking it up on the Wikipedias - apparently it is a feeding strategy.

    • @hoosfire4270
      @hoosfire4270 Před 2 lety +62

      they most likely wouldn't hunt or go directly for you unless you did something to make them aggresive towards you. that or they're just really really hungry, even then, most animals avoid humans because of how tall we are

    • @yuchitrevorching9677
      @yuchitrevorching9677 Před 2 lety +20

      the spinner shark?

    • @TimJBucci
      @TimJBucci Před 2 lety +4

      @@yuchitrevorching9677 Yes

    • @yuchitrevorching9677
      @yuchitrevorching9677 Před 2 lety +3

      oh a shark that have 1 to 2m size

    • @TimJBucci
      @TimJBucci Před 2 lety +2

      @@yuchitrevorching9677 They're born at 1m and grow to 2m?

  • @michaelhartman3066
    @michaelhartman3066 Před 2 lety +337

    Every shark in this video is WAAAYYYY bigger than real life compared to the human.

    • @EduSanjuan777
      @EduSanjuan777 Před 2 lety +82

      They put the maximum estimates. Some are conservative others are op. Many mistakes on this video

    • @wuestenfuchsxy
      @wuestenfuchsxy Před 2 lety +74

      @@EduSanjuan777 yea no, the scale of the diver is just wrong, look at the bullshark for example 11:00 lets say the diver is 2m tall, the bullshark is shown as 7m long.

    • @Sakhmeth
      @Sakhmeth Před 2 lety +18

      @@wuestenfuchsxy Yeah, I wonder if the creator used the head to tip of the fin by mistake for their 180cm baseline, instead of head to heel. That would add almost another 40cm or so.

    • @KevinReillySV
      @KevinReillySV Před 2 lety +40

      Idk if the sharks are wrong or if they used a fucking toddler for the diving model reference

    • @Andres-ws5lc
      @Andres-ws5lc Před 2 lety +19

      True, according to this video, and the scale of the diver, looks like a whale shark is basically as big as a blue whale

  • @ambroseghost1351
    @ambroseghost1351 Před rokem +2

    Wow some of those extinct sharks looked like they came from another planet. They looked so cool!

  • @ih4t3sch00l
    @ih4t3sch00l Před rokem +1

    I like how they got the creepy choir music to an instrumental version of Moskau

  • @anabelleadams5656
    @anabelleadams5656 Před 2 lety +189

    Sharks are beautiful in my opinion even they can be dangerous. The whale shark is just a big friendly giant where the great white shark is like a grumpy old man with cool teeth. The megalodon is creepy though. The rest of sharks that do exist are pretty cool.

    • @altanmehmet5159
      @altanmehmet5159 Před 2 lety +12

      Yeah I don't know why sharks get so much hate

    • @Gerboturbo0
      @Gerboturbo0 Před 2 lety +30

      @@altanmehmet5159 they don’t get hate they get killed for there meat and fins infact some of the sharks on this
      List are dead because of humans and hunting

    • @Min0waman
      @Min0waman Před 2 lety

      @@Gerboturbo0 nah they do get a decent amount of hate it's partly the fault of media popularization of sharks as blood thirsty killing machines but in an ironic term of events media is now helping to make people realize that sharks aren't as dangerous as they thought. Although they still are dangerous. Seeing how stupid gen z is I hope they don't spread some stupid misinformation about sharks being not dangerous at all

    • @hughson9229
      @hughson9229 Před 2 lety

      @@Gerboturbo0 no I think they mean that sharks have a reputation of being blood thirsty human killing monsters you know due to movies and stuff. A reputation they don't really deserve cause sharks kill like 6, 10 or 15 people a year, we kill millions of sharks. Most due to pollution and hunting. But I won't be surprised if alot of those sharks died due to humans being afraid of sharks and so they killed them. Sharks are also the reasons so many are afraid of the ocean etc.

    • @Samstar369
      @Samstar369 Před rokem +15

      @@altanmehmet5159
      Sharks get bad rap for being predators. Nowadays, tho, schools teach us that sharks are just curious creatures, often mistaking humans as their natural prey.

  • @TheCardboardDinosaur
    @TheCardboardDinosaur Před 2 lety +22

    There's something terrifying about these giant sharks coming on screen while Moscow plays.

    • @KingKerosene
      @KingKerosene Před rokem +3

      Pov: You see a helicoprion swimming toward you with a ushanka on and holding a bottle of vodka

    • @TheCardboardDinosaur
      @TheCardboardDinosaur Před rokem +2

      @@KingKerosene GOOD LOR-

    • @KingKerosene
      @KingKerosene Před rokem +1

      @@TheCardboardDinosaur *you look closer and it has a tattoo of a hammer and sickle*

  • @Asher-Tzvi
    @Asher-Tzvi Před rokem +7

    Fun fact: Helicaprion isn't actually a shark, it's an extinct shark-like eugeneodont fish, which in itself is an extinct order of cartilaginous fish. Keep *SHARK-LIKE* in mind

  • @jago07
    @jago07 Před rokem +3

    This is also going to become a digital museum of sorts, when you look at how many of the still living sharks are endangered or near endangered.

  • @endsoul2105
    @endsoul2105 Před 2 lety +44

    Respect to the cameraman who took all of the pictures of sharks

  • @obsessivecatdisordersquad7577

    I don't know why but I just love how you have Moscow going on in the background near the end of the video but besides that I did not realize how large basking sharks were thank you

    • @joshplays7445
      @joshplays7445 Před 2 lety +3

      The sizes are a bit too large in the video for everything.

    • @eminem2996
      @eminem2996 Před rokem +6

      This guys choice of music for this video is funny

  • @tonytaskforce3465
    @tonytaskforce3465 Před rokem +3

    An astonishing number of shark species perished at the same time as the dinosaurs were destroyed. What a carnage.

  • @boiledliddo
    @boiledliddo Před rokem

    really informative. Plenty of sharks I've seen for the first time.

  • @Futuretense101
    @Futuretense101 Před rokem +286

    Makes me wonder...how many sharks on this list, that we believe are long gone, may still be down in the depths? How many new species are out there waiting to be uncovered? When I was in the second grade, there were around 350 species identified that still lived. Now, the list is over 720. We still have so much to learn. This is one reason why I love Sharks!

    • @MessekBroccoli
      @MessekBroccoli Před rokem

      Unfortunately, with sharks specifically it's very clear to see when they went extinct, they simply stop shedding their teeth and so they stop showing up in the fossil record, then it's just seeing when the sediment was layed.
      So no, Megalodon is not hiding anywhere, the are no helicoprions floating about, it's sad but that's just how it is, we will almost definitely discover completely new sharks though! No need to look at what we don't have and be sad, look towards all that we may discover!

    • @Super_Cooleggs
      @Super_Cooleggs Před rokem +9

      faxs bro no printer 😢

    • @johnortiz2703
      @johnortiz2703 Před rokem +67

      None, because the reason why most big species went extinct was because their was no where near enough
      Prey for them to sustain such a size. Even then, most sea creatures that live in such dept are small due to the pressure being way to stressful for bigger creatures, they’d simply be crushed. Unless you’re a blue whale or any other whale species that are so big that such depth can take time to crush. Whales have to eat a lot of krill tho.

    • @Futuretense101
      @Futuretense101 Před rokem +11

      @A Megalodon With Internet Connection Sure. Pay for a submarine ride...and find one that can fit a man over 2 meters tall 🤣🤣

    • @worldprops333
      @worldprops333 Před rokem

      @@johnortiz2703 your post is genuinely hard to read because of your bad spelling and grammar.

  • @BirdRaiserE
    @BirdRaiserE Před rokem +60

    "Though I walk through the valley of extinct sharks, I shall fear no evil."
    -Basking Shark and Whale Shark, probably

    • @janzimon12
      @janzimon12 Před rokem

      Im sad that those two are almost gonna be gone forever

    • @NevilleBevin
      @NevilleBevin Před 11 měsíci

      @@janzimon12there are conservation efforts in place

  • @water_sponsored
    @water_sponsored Před rokem +4

    The fact that a shark can weigh more than a tank is incredible

  • @breadstick2972
    @breadstick2972 Před rokem +3

    “so here’s this little freak, he’s this big. yeah, he went went extinct about 300 million years ago… welp, into the shark pile with you!” *wet slapping noises as i throw this shark on top of all of the other every single shark*

  • @katherines8873
    @katherines8873 Před rokem +48

    I find sharks interesting for the same reason I find crocodiles interesting, they have existed for millions and millions of years, and yet, they haven't changed a whole lot, which is a testament to how efficient they've been throughout their existence

    • @Just_B0red
      @Just_B0red Před rokem +4

      Yeah, like they obviously shrunk a lot (besides basking and whale shark) but still function the same more or less

    • @veasey3997
      @veasey3997 Před rokem +1

      i mean... they grow until they die from it. they literally get so big that they cant afford to exert energy into getting off the bottom floor to hunt so they end up drowning. in the 1800's gators were easily 20+ feet all around on average

  • @ariannasv22
    @ariannasv22 Před rokem +228

    I knew there were smaller sharks but I had assumed that they were the outliers, but turns out that most sharks are still big just not as monsterous as nat geo and other media tend to portray them. Some of the larger ones could definitely bite my head clean off but at least they look cool or cute. 🥰

    • @RL-DarkSpark
      @RL-DarkSpark Před rokem +9

      I live in a country where blue sharks swim around. (Never saw one tho)
      Didn't know they were this big...They look like 60cm on photos
      *Nah they're 2m long*

    • @dnfluffles772
      @dnfluffles772 Před rokem +7

      One thing kinda cool but kinda saddening is the whole ptychodus genus of shark (which were giant sharks with flat teeth made for eating crustaceans) are all extinct.

    • @bloodythirstdeath8277
      @bloodythirstdeath8277 Před rokem +1

      CUUUUUUTE?!!!!!

    • @andyfriederichsen
      @andyfriederichsen Před rokem +3

      @@bloodythirstdeath8277 Have you not seen a zebra shark or a lantern shark? Besides, sharks RARELY attack people unprovoked (two dozen shark attacks a year at most).

    • @fart63
      @fart63 Před rokem +5

      There’s quite a few small sharks missing from this list and an infinite an unknown amount of extinct ones

  • @brolywin6045
    @brolywin6045 Před rokem +1

    You should make a size comparison of extinct creatures like the dunkleosteus or the mosasaur sometime!

  • @iamshark2161
    @iamshark2161 Před rokem +2

    Mad respect to whoever named a shark the graceful shark

  • @Albertable
    @Albertable Před 2 lety +986

    I never thought that goblin sharks can exceed the size of a great white and a great hammer, thanks for giving me a nightmare scenario that will be waiting in my sleep!
    edit: bruh, these replies 💀💀💀

    • @channelgigas7042
      @channelgigas7042  Před 2 lety +92

      Haha you welcome 😅

    • @Aidanjacksonkightly_reptiles
      @Aidanjacksonkightly_reptiles Před 2 lety +165

      Well, they're as long but really a fraction of the size, great whites are heeaaapppsss bigger in terms of weight which what should really concern you. A giraffe is taller than a T. rex but that doesn't mean they're bigger, same principle applies here.

    • @Random_Nobody_Official
      @Random_Nobody_Official Před 2 lety +18

      dont forget about the giant frilled shark...

    • @Taylor-boi362
      @Taylor-boi362 Před 2 lety +7

      @@channelgigas7042 Thanks for adding one of my favorite music - 2:46

    • @VengeanceFizz
      @VengeanceFizz Před 2 lety +7

      12:10 this Shark isnt extinct i saw a real Not Fake Video where the Shark swims friendly above the diver

  • @DangerousDevilOfficial
    @DangerousDevilOfficial Před rokem +97

    I have loved sharks all my life. And know a lot about them but this definitely taught me about multiple sharks I never even knew existed! Thank you for making this list! Must have taken a LOT of work!

  • @The_Mythical_Potato
    @The_Mythical_Potato Před rokem +3

    It's sad that all of the cool looking sharks are gone :(

  • @jimbo113
    @jimbo113 Před rokem +2

    Personally I like the smaller sharks more than the larger ones, I find them very satisfying and they also have better personalities

  • @bugtrainerpilk1007
    @bugtrainerpilk1007 Před 2 lety +47

    Crazy how sharks (as a group) have survived several extinction events over a span of 300 plus years. Yet now some of them are getting squad wiped for practically no reason in the grand scheme of things

    • @OGrupxe
      @OGrupxe Před 2 lety

      Imagine living through several extinction events just to get collectively wiped out by a bunch of dumbass hairless monkeys who are somehow so obsessed with making your limbs into soup they are willing to drive everything that remotely looks and tastes like you into extinction

    • @michaelanderson7715
      @michaelanderson7715 Před 2 lety +15

      "Crazy how sharks (as a group) have survived several extinction events over a span of 300 plus years."
      - yeah, 300 years is amazing 🤣

    • @tsumikiayato1560
      @tsumikiayato1560 Před 2 lety +9

      Ah, yes, the sharks, a species whose first specimens evolved into existence in... the 1700s?

    • @michaelanderson7715
      @michaelanderson7715 Před 2 lety +5

      @@tsumikiayato1560 remove 'a' for accuracy (sarcasm aside)

    • @aguywhodoesstuff1116
      @aguywhodoesstuff1116 Před rokem +3

      420+million years is no joke

  • @Justin-fd7tg
    @Justin-fd7tg Před 2 lety +6

    Yo this instrumental Moscow goes so fuckin hard bro got me dancing

  • @mrscrunklebot
    @mrscrunklebot Před rokem

    I like how it shows if they are endangered or not, great addition

  • @cousinjuno
    @cousinjuno Před rokem

    Absolutely fabulous, so entertaining. If I may ask what was the music played during the second grouping, sounded like an epic or Opera? Whatever it was I absolutely loved it!

  • @Iguana5k
    @Iguana5k Před 2 lety +35

    4:12 Huh, the gummy sharks I bought at the store kiosk when I was a kid were way smaller xD

    • @riobrotoons8432
      @riobrotoons8432 Před 2 lety

      not that one! that one you brought it!: th.bing.com/th/id/R.ad26a812fcee4a57d44203e9269906fe?rik=IXmtYx7bspja9g&riu=http%3a%2f%2fwww.sweetcitycandy.com%2fmedia%2fcatalog%2fproduct%2fcache%2f1%2fimage%2f9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95%2f0%2f4%2f0435.jpg&ehk=3RH3vrPlcVsxvpB7%2bTSgogehyKA9r9QeUIzGsYScd9M%3d&risl=&pid=ImgRaw&r=0

    • @yuchitrevorching9677
      @yuchitrevorching9677 Před 2 lety

      wow

    • @zamir3773
      @zamir3773 Před rokem +1

      Gummy shark is in ocean not store

    • @jerryblades5022
      @jerryblades5022 Před 2 měsíci

      @@zamir3773r/whoooosh he meant candy

  • @bloxgame4823
    @bloxgame4823 Před 2 lety +36

    I love how all the extinct ones aren’t even in English but the ones that still exist are like super chill names.

    • @benselander1482
      @benselander1482 Před 2 lety

      yeah but that's because they went extinct before English was invented..

    • @puncake8047
      @puncake8047 Před rokem +1

      They are in Latin I think

    • @dinonuggett2968
      @dinonuggett2968 Před rokem +5

      That’s because of people giving extant animals common names. Binomial nomenclature is used on todays animal too. like the white rhino is Ceratotherium simum or humans having the name Homo sapien. It’s just more simple to have one globally used name for science rather than all the 100s of names used by everyday people like pumas are also called mountain lions, cougars, and panther, which can get confusing.

    • @puncake8047
      @puncake8047 Před rokem

      @@dinonuggett2968 its their scientific name

    • @dinonuggett2968
      @dinonuggett2968 Před rokem

      @@puncake8047 is that not what I said?

  • @MaoMatsuri
    @MaoMatsuri Před rokem +1

    Wow, i can't imagine how it would be if all of these are still living, scary but amazing.
    thank you for this video, it was interesting to watch

  • @ST4RGG
    @ST4RGG Před rokem +1

    I was waiting for that "baby shark do do do do do do rut ta rut"

  • @Kaylsu
    @Kaylsu Před 2 lety +15

    Be grateful, we still have the Whale Shark second biggest shark that ever lived

    • @aguywhodoesstuff1116
      @aguywhodoesstuff1116 Před rokem +1

      we do now, but who knows about the future?. :(
      Pls dont let these creatures die out.

  • @5amH45lam
    @5amH45lam Před 2 lety +22

    The diver in this is braver than I am.

  • @Sirdilophosaurusthethird2.0

    12:13 no animal has existed for that long

  • @reiroll5
    @reiroll5 Před rokem

    All those sharks and the diver never even flinched.

  • @thecatfather857
    @thecatfather857 Před 2 lety +11

    I wasn’t expecting to hear an instrumental of Moskau during this.

  • @MaishidaHD
    @MaishidaHD Před 2 lety +24

    Some of the largest extinct sharks on this video look like enlarged small sharks we have now. And this just makes them even more menacing. 😰

    • @palarious
      @palarious Před 2 lety +8

      That's because we don't know what they actually looked like- it's largely guess work because most of a shark's skeleton is cartilage, which is a soft tissue that doesn't fossilize well.

    • @sidneyjohnston7499
      @sidneyjohnston7499 Před rokem +1

      Did you know that we have cartilage in our ears?

  • @anonomooose
    @anonomooose Před dnem

    I am obsessed with how they just stacked the sharks on top of each otged

  • @user-bl4ng1vp1c
    @user-bl4ng1vp1c Před 11 dny

    This reminds of the scene where mr incredible was searching on the computer to see which heros were defeated

  • @scorpman300
    @scorpman300 Před 2 lety +64

    amazing how the overall body shape of sharks has not really changed over the millions of years. and sad to see that so many are endangered and we all know the causes but yet do nothing to stop it. stopping it would not be that hard either but we let greed and politics get in the way. many of the sharks of the past were so beautiful as well.

    • @generalkayoss7347
      @generalkayoss7347 Před 2 lety +5

      They actually have little to no idea what these extinct sharks look like. Literally all that can be preserved is the jaws and teeth.

    • @SCARSOFEUROPE
      @SCARSOFEUROPE Před 2 lety

      @@generalkayoss7347 no

    • @zack-ronald259
      @zack-ronald259 Před 2 lety +4

      @@SCARSOFEUROPE Yes, sharks do not have bones which means that their bodies completely decompose after death.

    • @benwesley5260
      @benwesley5260 Před rokem +1

      Shark politics, now that’s deep.

    • @TimberWulfIsHere
      @TimberWulfIsHere Před rokem

      Probably because there was no millions of years

  • @yepthatsegg3604
    @yepthatsegg3604 Před rokem +1

    Idk why I got so invested in this. I literally cheered when I saw the whale shark lol. Great work!

  • @Nelvana352
    @Nelvana352 Před 10 měsíci +3

    My favourite Living Sharks Vs Cenozoic Sharks
    Great White Shark Vs Otodus
    Whale Shark Vs Megalodon
    Please Like it!

  • @darknight2133
    @darknight2133 Před 2 lety +53

    Dá muita pena em saber que muitos desses animais estão extintos, enquanto outros caminham para um mesmo destino sombrio...amo tubarões ❤️❤️!! Belíssimo trabalho...💙💙 A propósito, amei a trilha sonora ..

  • @zombiesalmon4997
    @zombiesalmon4997 Před 2 lety +9

    Moskau coming out of nowhere made me chortle. Great vid 💙

  • @NotMyWar
    @NotMyWar Před rokem

    I love how it went from epic space opera music, to Greek Disco.

  • @realkaitv5466
    @realkaitv5466 Před rokem +1

    Orca : Im the shark killer
    Megalodon : Hold My Extinct :D

  • @MaishidaHD
    @MaishidaHD Před 2 lety +19

    Me: "How many shark species are there?"
    Nature: "Yes."

  • @shadowgames7697
    @shadowgames7697 Před 2 lety +13

    What probably shocks me most is the fact that not ONCE did "Extinct in wild" come up.. They're either alive or dead.. there's no giving or taking.. no protection sadly for these marvellous creatures 😔

    • @darknezz5000
      @darknezz5000 Před 2 lety +5

      You just simply can't keep some species in captivity they die cause they need such a large Space of Water

    • @yuchitrevorching9677
      @yuchitrevorching9677 Před rokem

      how about the lost shark

    • @puncake8047
      @puncake8047 Před rokem

      I thought it stood for Endangered Watch

  • @Gamerafighter76
    @Gamerafighter76 Před rokem

    So many cool and awesome species of shark. Nicely done.

  • @puzzlebox420
    @puzzlebox420 Před rokem +1

    the little diver swam away at the end 😝

  • @samuelparker7231
    @samuelparker7231 Před 2 lety +82

    If the giant frill went extinct before the age of mammals I’m wondering how long the frilled shark that lives today has been on earth

    • @thomaslikescars
      @thomaslikescars Před 2 lety +16

      Very closely related (no duh right) so it's fair to say this one found success in being smaller. Could be unchanged for millions of years like the coelacanth

    • @donovannnn
      @donovannnn Před 2 lety

      Yes it is the most ancient with the cow sharks of any other shark that is still alive today.

    • @aeyelashbug6311
      @aeyelashbug6311 Před 2 lety

      According to this video the giant frill existed before multicellular organisms evolved, so I wouldn't say it's all that reliable

    • @tegamingother
      @tegamingother Před 2 lety

      @@aeyelashbug6311 that evolution of multicellular organisms existed bya billions of years ago not millions.

    • @aeyelashbug6311
      @aeyelashbug6311 Před 2 lety

      @@tegamingother Yeah 1.5 bya, which is the same as 1,500 mya

  • @howardkerr5351
    @howardkerr5351 Před 2 lety +47

    A very thorough and interesting video, I have been interested in sharks for over 50 years so I was very impressed to see species I was unfamiliar with. Thank you for including the Snaggletooth Shark Hemipristis it is my favourite, you might consider adding the two fossil species of Hemipristis in future versions. And I like the fact you are bringing awareness to the public of how vulnerable these amazing creatures are.

    • @Dman9fp
      @Dman9fp Před 2 lety +1

      Yep they've been my overall fav if I must have one... Also it's be nice to see more tiger sharks, they were actually sort of diverse in the ancient past (species eaglesomi, aduncus, mayumbensis, ancestral latidens, maybe there's more... I know Physogaleus wasn't in the tiger lineage but also sizeable & impressive to some degree I bet)

  • @abigailcurtiss6226
    @abigailcurtiss6226 Před rokem +3

    Aye! Short fin mako is in here! One of My favorite sharks

  • @s.8337
    @s.8337 Před rokem +1

    Lovely vid! Could you do one for birds?

  • @Tylerlol1011
    @Tylerlol1011 Před 2 lety +13

    Wow, I never knew there was so many shark species. Thanks for your time for making this video sir.

  • @yeeyee8520
    @yeeyee8520 Před rokem +29

    This video was very well done. I work with fossils (most my work done with marine fossils) and all of the names I’ve seen were correct. Some really interesting and not well known sharks on here with the actual names, very impressive

  • @cupcakeblush4537
    @cupcakeblush4537 Před rokem

    Can u make squids next? Love ur content

  • @TheBadSpecialistOnTheRocks
    @TheBadSpecialistOnTheRocks Před měsícem

    I love how the sharks keep grouping up on that ever growing fish blob

  • @sayakest
    @sayakest Před 2 lety +5

    Every other shark: Normally facing left
    Listracanthus: 🐍

  • @booooooooohut
    @booooooooohut Před 2 lety +27

    Something seems odd with the length/weights. They are all over the place, sometimes in KG, sometimes in grams (even if over a KG).

    • @evelyn-nm6iy
      @evelyn-nm6iy Před rokem +1

      yh probably just different sources using different scales, with all the research put into the video i can see why they didnt bother with conversions.

    • @booooooooohut
      @booooooooohut Před rokem +2

      @@evelyn-nm6iy if they didnt bother with the conversion, how would they know if one shark is bigger then another?

  • @tiashadrows3469
    @tiashadrows3469 Před rokem

    This just makes me want to go back and see all of the extinct sharks in natural habitats

  • @abigailcurtiss6226
    @abigailcurtiss6226 Před rokem +4

    YES HELICOPRION MADE IT ON! MY ALL TIME FAVORITE SHARK

    • @chrissy9997
      @chrissy9997 Před 16 dny

      Definitely my favourite extinct shark. I love how much it threw people off with how bizarre it is until we've reached the mildly more normal looking interpretations. Mildly...

  • @pniccia3211
    @pniccia3211 Před 2 lety +7

    My favorite is the whale shark since I've seen one up close. I remember having shivers since i didn't expect it to be big. We were lucky since we paid to see it in the ocean but cannot guarantee that you will see one.

  • @YOUR_MOTHER_WENT_TO_COLLEGE

    Whale sharks are awesome! Probably the only gentle giant sharks out there.

  • @MenRexonaClinicalprotection

    This is a really good video, the only really noticeable flaw I see is that the genus for Megalodon is outdated (the current genus is Otodus) but I don't know when that change was made.

  • @ruffruggednraw
    @ruffruggednraw Před 2 lety +12

    I love how moskau is in this

  • @snowshoes5942
    @snowshoes5942 Před 2 lety +67

    The sizes are pretty mis-leading. You stretched them to around their max length, but the proportions are way off making them WAY bigger than they would actually be.

    • @rosas4971
      @rosas4971 Před 2 lety +9

      Agreed, spent half my time googling because of it

    • @JonathanAnimate2
      @JonathanAnimate2 Před 2 lety +6

      Yeah, I mean look at the insane size of the basking shark. the size of the tiger/bull/great-white I think we’d all know about it if they they were that big! Also googled to confirm these are way off.

    • @vicenterojasmezzano3262
      @vicenterojasmezzano3262 Před 2 lety +7

      Totally agree, in the video the human is the same size as the jaw of the great white

    • @mere8593
      @mere8593 Před 2 lety

      @@vicenterojasmezzano3262 the human in the video was 180 centimeters which equals about 5 feet 10 inches average female great white sharks grow to about 15 - 16 feet meaning it’s over a 10 foot difference . so a 5’10 human being about the size of a jaw of a great white shark is pretty accurate.

    • @mere8593
      @mere8593 Před 2 lety

      @@JonathanAnimate2 basking sharks are the 2nd largest living shark averaging 22-29 feet and a meter wide jaw, could swallow a 5’10 human whole.

  • @justuraveragecunt9005
    @justuraveragecunt9005 Před rokem +1

    Whenever I look at these size comparisons I look at my door and try to imagine the animal for reference

  • @slick4601
    @slick4601 Před rokem +2

    wouldn't it be an epic april fools prank if they all came back?

  • @nick22091
    @nick22091 Před 2 lety +58

    A lot of the sharks towards the end of the video are 7-10m length and 1-2t in weight. Me thinks someone got tired of researching each individual shark dimensions so just changed the name 😂 but other than that cool vid!
    Also a 7-10m long shark only weighing 1-2t would be built like a cheese string 😅

    • @kevinren6323
      @kevinren6323 Před 2 lety +3

      Lol

    • @ras5382
      @ras5382 Před 2 lety +12

      I feel the same, some of the 7-10 meters weight 5-7t and then all of a sudden they all weight 1-2t. hmm...??🤔

    • @indydc2180
      @indydc2180 Před 2 lety +2

      Also the mako shark species are endangered... and not safe like this video shows

    • @godzillainhellgoji5299
      @godzillainhellgoji5299 Před 2 lety +1

      They are all Ptychodus so that might explain why both the lenght And weight didnt changed

    • @taylorpower3862
      @taylorpower3862 Před 2 lety +1

      @@indydc2180 yeah and frilled sharks aren’t extinct

  • @ghostplasma5004
    @ghostplasma5004 Před 2 lety +40

    Bruh imagine if the megalodon was actually small and only had a large mouth