ZME Science on MSN
The Greenland Shark Isn’t Blind After All, Even After Centuries of Swimming in Dark Water
“You see it move its eye,” says Dorota Skowronska-Krawczyk, an associate professor at UC Irvine. “The shark is tracking the ...
The Greenland shark is thought to live for about 400 years but somehow its eyes appear to barely deteriorate, according to a ...
Its unearthly look is often accentuated by the presence of tiny crustacean parasites hooked into the corneas on its eyes, but ...
DALLMYD on MSN
Swimming in Hawaii when sharks showed up
Swimming with sea turtles in Hawaii was calm and unforgettable. Clear water, slow movements, and close encounters made it ...
An experienced crew member on the White Shark Africa cage diving boat in Mossel Bay, South Africa, it is Allen’s second time ...
It’s getting easier to imagine the U.S. President using heavy-handed tactics to coerce Ottawa or contest our Arctic ...
There’s a great deal of unpretentious B-movie fun to be had in this brief, brutal and slickly made creature feature ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
World's Longest-Living Sharks May Hold Clues to Preserving Vision For Life
Scientists had long assumed that Greenland sharks ( Somniosus microcephalus) have, at best, exceedingly poor vision. They ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Greenland sharks reveal that extreme longevity does not have to mean failing vision
In a UC Irvine office, Dorota Skowronska-Krawczyk studies a video that has changed her view of a deep-sea legend. “You see it ...
A study of the hearts of Greenland sharks has found that the long-lived deep-sea predator has massive accumulations of ageing ...
Greenland sharks maintain sharp vision for centuries, revealing powerful DNA repair and eye-protection strategies that may ...
Greenland sharks are the longest-living vertebrates in the world with lifespans that can reach as much as 400 years, and a ...
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