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  2. Livyatan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Livyatan

    Livyatan is an extinct genus of macroraptorial sperm whale containing one known species: L. melvillei. The genus name was inspired by the biblical sea monster Leviathan, and the species name by Herman Melville, the author of the famous novel Moby-Dick about a white bull sperm whale. Herman Melville often referred to whales as "Leviathans" in ...

  3. Macroraptorial sperm whale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macroraptorial_sperm_whale

    Macroraptorial sperm whales were highly predatory whales of the sperm whale superfamily (Physeteroidea) of the Miocene epoch that hunted large marine mammals, including other whales, using their large teeth. They consist of five genera: Acrophyseter, Albicetus, Brygmophyseter, Livyatan and Zygophyseter. [1] All species are known by at least a ...

  4. Megalodon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megalodon

    The animal faced competition from whale-eating cetaceans, such as Livyatan and other macroraptorial sperm whales and possibly smaller ancestral killer whales . As the shark preferred warmer waters, it is thought that oceanic cooling associated with the onset of the ice ages , coupled with the lowering of sea levels and resulting loss of ...

  5. A newly discovered colossal whale might be the heaviest ...

    www.aol.com/newly-discovered-colossal-whale...

    The fossil specimen is shorter than that of a 25-meter long (82-foot-long) blue whale — but its skeletal mass still potentially exceeded that of any known mammal or sea vertebrate, including its ...

  6. Evolution of cetaceans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_cetaceans

    The evolution of cetaceans is thought to have begun in the Indian subcontinent from even-toed ungulates (Artiodactyla) 50 million years ago (mya) and to have proceeded over a period of at least 15 million years. [2] Cetaceans are fully aquatic marine mammals belonging to the order Artiodactyla and branched off from other artiodactyls around 50 mya.

  7. Physeteroidea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physeteroidea

    Physeteroidea is a superfamily that includes three extant species of whales: the sperm whale, in the genus Physeter, and the pygmy sperm whale and dwarf sperm whale, in the genus Kogia. In the past, these genera have sometimes been united in a single family, the Physeteridae, with the two Kogia species in the subfamily Kogiinae; however, recent ...

  8. Zygophyseter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zygophyseter

    Zygophyseter varolai is an extinct sperm whale that lived during the Tortonian age of the Late Miocene 11.2 to 7.6 million years ago. It is known from a single specimen from the Pietra Leccese Formation in Italy. It was a member of a stem group of fossil macroraptorial sperm whales (often shortened to "raptorial") also including Brygmophyseter ...

  9. Dwarf sperm whale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwarf_sperm_whale

    The species was considered to be synonymous with the pygmy sperm whale (Kogia breviceps) from 1878 until 1998. The dwarf sperm whale is a small whale, 2 to 2.7 m (6 ft 7 in to 8 ft 10 in) and 136 to 272 kg (300 to 600 lb), that has a grey coloration, square head, small jaw, and robust body. Its appearance is very similar to the pygmy sperm ...