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Hammerhead: Shark Frenzy, also known as Sharkman or simply Hammerhead, is a 2005 Syfy original movie, written by Kenneth M. Badish and Boaz Davidson, and directed by Michael Oblowitz. The film stars William Forsythe , Hunter Tylo , and Jeffrey Combs .
Hammerhead: Shark Frenzy, also known as Sharkman or Hammerhead: N/A Sci-fi/Action/Horror 2005 Raging Sharks: N/A Sci-fi/Action/Horror 2005 Spring Break Shark Attack: N/A Action/Adventure/Drama 2008 Shark Swarm, also known as Great White: N/A Thriller 2008 Shark in Venice, also known as Sharks in Venice in the U.S. N/A Natural horror/Action 2009
Sharkman became the Discovery Channel's Shark Week staple for over ten years. In 2009, Rutzen was featured as the "Sharkman" on 60 Minutes with Anderson Cooper on CBS . Rutzen then joined with BBC Natural World to develop The Great White Shark: A Living Legend (2008 - 2009), in which Rutzen visited a popular seal hunting area to better ...
The cave is located in the Taurus Mountain range in southern Turkey and reaches depths of up to 1,276 meters (4,186 feet). A huge rescue effort was launched involving multiple teams of experienced ...
Scanner Sombre is an exploration video game played from a first-person perspective. [1] [2] The player awakens in a tent inside a cave; after finding an augmented reality headset and a LIDAR scanner, the player can illuminate the surrounding environment using dots.
The castle was built above the cave long before any excavation. At that time, the scientists hit a more than 5-foot-thick rock, which blocked them from burrowing into key layers of the collapsed cave.
He took up residence in Kaneana cave where he would leave human bodies to rot before eating them, as he found rotted flesh to be tastiest. [ 2 ] When Nanaue was a man, Umi-a-Liloa , the king of Hawaii, issued an order for all men to till a large plantation for the king.
The terms troglobitic, stygobitic, stygofauna, troglofauna, and hypogean or hypogeic, are often used for cave-dwelling organisms. [1] Troglomorphism occurs in molluscs, velvet worms, arachnids, myriapods, crustaceans, insects, fish, amphibians (notably cave salamanders) and reptiles. To date no mammals or birds have been found to live ...