The first shark ever documented in Antarctic waters was captured on camera at 1,600 feet deep in near-freezing temperatures.
Researchers filmed a 10-to-13-foot sleeper shark off the South Shetland Islands, in what may be the first recording of the species that far south.
A deep-sea camera captured the first-ever shark recorded in Antarctic waters - a 10- to 13-foot sleeper shark swimming 1,608 feet below the surface.
Keir Starmer, you have two choices now – sort your warring party out or call an election ...
THE prehistoric “super carnivore” megalodon was bigger than previously thought, growing to a whopping 80ft and weighing 94 ...
Scientists have captured footage of a sleeper shark farther south than ever before, suggesting Antarctica’s Southern Ocean is ...
It's nearly 14 feet long and weighs 1,653 pounds, scientists say.
In January 2025, a deep-sea camera captured a sleeper shark cruising 490 meters below the surface in Antarctic waters — the first shark ever recorded this far south. The 10-to-13-foot shark was moving ...
Shark attacks in 2025 were back to a normal level after a down year in 2024. California continues to overindex in unprovoked attacks, and in 2025 recorded the only shark-related death of the year in ...
Antarctica has always been the ultimate gatekeeper. Its waters are famously shark-free, or so ...
Sharks and rays in the Western Indian Ocean are facing an extinction crisis. Almost half of the region’s 270 known species ...
On Feb. 8, Contender the great white shark was pinged again in the Atlantic, about 45 miles southeast of Cape Fear, near Wilmington, North Carolina.