The finned octopus lived alongside T. rex and may have been one of the top predators in the ancient ocean food chain.
The massive invertebrates may have been top predators, according to an analysis of their fossilized jaws. The work suggests ...
Giant octopuses that lived between 100 million and 72 million years ago may have reached a total length of up to 19 meters, ...
Some octopuses that lived over 72 million years ago were as long as whales. These huge predators may have been the largest invertebrates ever.
These sea creatures may have been some of the fiercest predators ...
Study of fossilised beaks shows patterns of wear and suggests some ancient species were up to 19 metres long ...
Giant octopuses may have ruled the oceans 100 million years ago, according to fossil evidence.
The ancient cephalopod, Nanaimoteuthis haggarti, appears to have been an apex predator that rivaled mosasaurs to rule prehistoric seas.
The discovery challenges a 370-million-year-old assumption that only vertebrates could be top ocean predators.
Somewhere between 100 and 72 million years ago, while mosasaurs and plesiosaurs dominated the world’s oceans, something else ...
Madrona Point in British Columbia, Canada, is a popular spot for diving. These waters are also home to the giant Pacific octopus, the largest octopus species on Earth. In this YouTube video, a diver ...