enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Great white shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_white_shark

    A great white shark was captured near Kangaroo Island in Australia on 1 April 1987. This shark was estimated to be more than 6.9 m (23 ft) long by Peter Resiley, [67] [73] and has been designated as KANGA. [72] Another great white shark was caught in Malta by Alfredo Cutajar on 16 April 1987. This shark was also estimated to be around 7.13 m ...

  3. Carcharodon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carcharodon

    The modern great white shark has been posited to have evolved from C. hastalis through a transitional species, C. hubbelli. [3] Extinct white shark tooth. Study of white shark taxonomy is complicated by nomenclature and repeated taxonomic reassignments of various species.

  4. Outline of sharks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_sharks

    Ben Cropp – Australian former shark hunter, who stopped in 1962 to produce some 150 wildlife documentaries; Richard Ellis – American marine biologist, author, and illustrator. Rodney Fox – Australian film maker, conservationist, survivor of great white shark attack and one of the world's foremost authorities on them

  5. Bull shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bull_shark

    The bull shark is diadromous, meaning they can swim between salt and fresh water with ease, [40] as they are euryhaline fish—able to quickly adapt to a wide range of salinities. Thus, the bull shark is one of the few cartilaginous fishes that have been reported in freshwater systems.

  6. Photos: Is that shark smiling? Here's why young great whites ...

    www.aol.com/news/photos-shark-smiling-heres-why...

    The young sharks he typically sees when out on the water on his half-cabin fishing boat range in size from 5½ to 9 feet in length, still small enough to qualify as "cute" by apex predator ...

  7. Elasmobranchii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elasmobranchii

    During the Carboniferous, some ctenacanths would grow to sizes rivalling the modern great white shark with bodies in the region of 7 metres (23 ft) in length. [16] During the Carboniferous and Permian, the xenacanths were abundant in both freshwater and marine environments, and would continue to exist into the Triassic with reduced diversity. [17]

  8. Breton, a 1,400-pound great white shark, returns to Florida coast

    www.aol.com/breton-1-400-pound-great-164305390.html

    A 13-foot great white shark made a return appearance to the Florida waters Wednesday. The over 1,400-pound male shark, named Breton, has been tracked by researchers since 2020 and last resurfaced ...

  9. Something in the ocean is eating great white sharks - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2014-06-10-something-in-the...

    The Megalodon was a prehistoric shark, much like a great white ... but 60-feet long. Researchers don't actually believe it was a Megalodon, but they do think it was a giant shark: a great white ...