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  2. Cynocephaly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynocephaly

    The Greek word (Greek: κῠνοκέφᾰλοι) "dog-head" also identified a sacred Egyptian baboon with a dog-like face. [5] Rather than literally depicting a hybrid human-animal state, these cynocephalic portrayals of deities conveyed those deities' therianthropic ability to shift between fully human and fully animal states. [ 6 ]

  3. Megalodon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megalodon

    A 2015 study linking shark size and typical swimming speed estimated that megalodon would have typically swum at 18 kilometers per hour (11 mph)–assuming that its body mass was typically 48 t (53 short tons; 47 long tons)–which is consistent with other aquatic creatures of its size, such as the fin whale (Balaenoptera physalus) which ...

  4. Largest prehistoric animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Largest_prehistoric_animals

    Size comparison between a human and two species of Basilosaurus, B. cetiodes (dark blue) and B. isis The heaviest archeocete , and possibly the heaviest known mammal was Perucetus , with weight estimated at 85–340 t (84–335 long tons; 94–375 short tons), while length is estimated at 17.0–20.1 meters (55.8–65.9 ft), [ 108 ] possibly ...

  5. A Surprisingly Contentious Study Says the Megalodon Was ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/forget-great-white-megalodon-shark...

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  6. File:Megalodon-Carcharodon-Scale-Chart-SVG.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Megalodon-Carcharodon...

    The silhouettes shown here depict megalodon as a robust Lamnid-like shark and are based on the estimated body dimensions proposed by Cooper et al. and a life restoration by Oliver Demuth. [1] However, due to the limited information on life appearance, other body plans have been proposed, and megalodon could have looked substantially different ...

  7. Sonar showed a 50-foot shark nearing boat off New England ...

    www.aol.com/news/sonar-showed-50-foot-shark...

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  8. Starfish bodies aren’t bodies at all, study finds - AOL

    www.aol.com/starfish-body-head-crawling-along...

    The bilateral body plan most animals have stems from molecular-level genetic actions that can be traced in the head and trunk, or main body, regions, which is why vertebrates, like humans, and ...

  9. Otodontidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otodontidae

    Otodontidae is an extinct family of sharks belonging to the order Lamniformes.Its members have been described as megatoothed sharks. [1] [2] They lived from the Early Cretaceous to the Pliocene, and included genera such as Otodus, including the giant megalodon. [3]