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- Sharks: Facts about some of the oceans top predators
Discover interesting facts about where sharks live, how big they can get, and how likely it is to get bitten by one
- Sharks: News, features and articles | Live Science
Bite into the meatiest coverage of great white sharks, megalodons and more with the latest shark news, features and articles from Live Science
- Great white sharks split into 3 populations 200,000 years ago and never . . .
Scientists found three distinct great-white-shark populations that congregate in different oceans and do not interbreed Their separation may have implications for conservation
- Scientists examine bloody mating wounds to reveal details of sharks . . .
Shark sex is a bitey business, with males grasping females with their teeth during the act The resulting wounds are helping scientists to figure out when and where sharks are doing the deed
- Why do sharks freeze when flipped upside down? - Live Science
Many shark species are temporarily paralyzed when turned upside down But what benefit does this trait have?
- Orcas in the Gulf of California paralyze young great white sharks . . .
An orca pod that made headlines last year for gutting a whale shark has struck again, this time perfecting a technique that involves paralyzing young great white sharks to eat their livers
- Watch hammerhead sharks swim in cyclones around ancient volcano in . . .
Hundreds of hammerhead sharks gather around an ancient volcano in the Pacific Ocean, drawn by secret signals radiating from the seabed, a new clip reveals
- Was Alexander the Great eaten by sharks? Inside the wild theories for . . .
The remains of Alexander the Great may lie under the streets of Alexandria, they may have been "eaten by a shark," or they may be somewhere else entirely But one thing is certain: Archaeologists
- Stupendous sharks: The largest, smallest and strangest sharks in the . . .
The sharks are sometimes caught by deep-sea anglers and may jump into fishing boats in an attempt to shake free of the anglers' hooks
- Fishers discover first-of-its-kind bright orange shark with two rare . . .
Fishers caught a bright orange shark off Costa Rica that had albinism, alongside the species' first scientifically documented case of an extremely rare condition called xanthism
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