Ah yes, Liopleurodon and the various species of mosasaur, the reptiles that secretly have mastered air bending to breathe at 10K m under the surface. Magic is truly a wonderful thing.
1:57 That IS a real fish! It is a deep sea lizardfish Bathysaurus ferox. It’s not actually related to lizardfishes (Synodontidae), but that’s it’s common name
People are making too big a deal about the trench. It's not some magical place you find monsters, it's just the deepest part of the ocean where life barely exists due to the intense pressure.
The fact that such videos exist for you to react is a grim evidence about humans clicking absolutely everything even moderately shiny on the internet while simultaneously having near-zero understanding of how science works.
Add to that that some of these channels are targeted at kids and people who do want to learn, and they may spread the misinformation unintentionally, and its a grand example of how content farms are the worst ;-;
For the sake of my own sanity, I choose to believe that it’s either kids too young to understand or people watching it because it’s hilariously inaccurate
I wouldn't really call this a shiny key attempt this is more preying upon peoples momentary interest in something they know absolutely nothing about which is sad because it's usually children and young teenagers that click on this stuff learning absolute bs and then in doing so helping boost it past genuine sources of information on what ever topic leaving actual academic produced content and people who are just passionate about something and want to talk about what ever.
I think we can place most of the blame on RUclips itself and the creators. I’m 15, I grew up with RUclips, so I know when I was 10 I was definitely watching “top 10 real megaldon sightings”. Luckily I have always been into animal documentaries so I was never tricked into believing this conspiracy theory.
As far as I can tell, no fangtooth fish of either species have been found in the Mariana Trench, but it’s conceivable that some could live there. But that’s only because they appear to live anywhere that’s deep enough besides the Southern Ocean, Arctic Ocean, and Mediterranean Sea. Especially the common fangtooth.
Not to mention he can also apparently alter its entire biology, since it WAS originally a shark that lived in warm, somewhat shallow waters. Like yeah, body adapted for that sort of environment would do indeed very well in the depths of Mariana Trench.
@@veronikamajerova4564 correct, they were a warm water predator and could not tolerate colder water, which is speculated to be the exact cause for their extinction
What makes the Hainosaurus bit even more depressing than it should be is the fact that Hainosaurus was synonymized with another Mosasaur named Tylosaurus. So he's essentially talking about a genus that possibly doesn't even exist anymore.
@@filipbitala2624 They exist, just not as living genera. Except for maybe Hainosaurus, which doesn't even have the "extinct" ecological status going for it currently. I say "maybe" because Brontosaurus re-established itself as an extinct genus, as opposed to a non-existent one. So there's a chance for Hainosaurus to at least have existence in the future.
Time to make an extinct animal top 10 list with Hainosaurus, Agathaumas, Monoclonius, Trachodon, Troodon, Dracorex, Stygimoloch, Predator X, Anatotitan, and Zunityrannus
Odobenocetops was a tusked cetacean with most fossil specimens having one tusk longer than the other. Only very few had both tusk of equal length. It is believed their tusk were either for display or as sensory organs.
6:55 (Odobenocetops) is a Whale species, (Odobenocetops) basic translation is Tooth walking whale, it's believed the tusks (they had two tusks but one was way longer than the other), was used in the same manner as Walrus tusks, to scrap though the sea bed etc for Mollusks. It's closest living relatives (but in two different families) is the Baluga-Whale and Nar-Whale.
What floors me is that they think Odobenocetops, a very small marine mammal, would have the lung capacity to make it to the bottom of the challenger deep just so they could eat a couple clams before making the trip all the way back up before they drown, as if the pressure and cold temperature wouldn't kill it long before that point.
"All the fossils we've found of these organisms are not from the trench." 1. Doing a fossil dig in 11 km of water is not easy. 2. The crust in the east end of the trench is being convected down into the Earth. Your Mariana mosasaurs might well be one million meters under Asia! How are you going to do a fossil dig through a million meters of rock?
What makes the Helicoprion part extra stupid is that Helicoprion went extinct before the Pacific plate even existed. How can you live in a trench formed by the subduction of a tectonic plate that didn't exist until 35 million years after the last of your kind died? The oldest Pacific crust is just east of the Mariana Trench, by the way.
Well I certainly had a good time, the tusk manatee really blew my socks off I never expected the Trench of be such a lively place full of oysters and tusk manatees !
I really love the logic of "we barely explore the sea, who knows what creature would live there" and immediately assuming that some kind of prehistoric beast are still exists right under our nose
Ooh yeah odobenocetops the sea creature which baby megalodon most likely preyed upon. So much scarier than any other sea creature. Also the massive inverted tusk wouldn't have been for defense it probably wouldve been for breaking mollusc shells, intimation or just display.
Person 1: "So our list starts with the Fangtooth.. What's next on the list?" Person 2: "........It's a Liopleurodon..." Person 1: "What?" Person 2: "... A Magical Liopleurodon..."
"We don't know what's in the mariana trench, there could be horrific monsters down there!!" cut to a dumbo octopus looking so damn cute it could be mistaken for a kids toy.
The best simile for this stupid argument of "But it could exist somewhere, because there's loads of space for it to hide!" is the assumption that Snow White was a true story, because her body could be buried somewhere and everyone else has to prove it is actually nowhere.
Marylanders eat clam chowder All who feed on molluscs dwell in the Mariana Trench Clams are molluscs Mary and Mariana both derive primarily from the Hebrew name Maryam Maryland is the Mariana Trench
“Lived in the shallow waters of Europe and North America” Ok ignoring you just said SHALLOW WATERS!?!? You said Europe and North America:/ Is the Mariana Trench even remotely close to those areas if it even existed at that time!?!?
Hey AVNJ, Soooooo the weird fish at 1:53 is called a Deepsea Lizardfish, they basically have teeth on top of their teeth, therefore having the same dental plan as Shin Godzilla
The funniest thing was that the Megalodon model was from ARK and if you’re getting science stuff from the game where the Meg is no bigger than a great white and smaller than a plesiosaur then just oof. Also ARK bruh that models not even great and I have 1500+ hours on the game so yk I love it.
To be fair, Ark has an excuse for the bad represention in its lore (pretty sure they recreate some of the creatures from humanity's medias, and also being ingenireed modified sub-species or artificial evolutions. (Irk, pretty sure the canonical biologist of the lore is "this is wrong. That's not normal. This biosphere shouldn't exist" on the first story map)
"This shark is similar to marine reptiles because it ate fish!" Okay, you know what that line reminds me of? When I was in my early college days, I took on a job as an editor for this guy who I later found out what bulk publishing crappy supernatural romance fiction on Amazon. He had one section of his book where he described this monster has being twice as big as a person with chalk white skin, horns, claws, and fangs (and some other details I don't remember because it was a long time ago) and then after this description proceeded to say, "but it had two arms, two legs, and a head, so you could easily mistake it for a person." I quit after finishing the first books because the whole book was like that. So, it's possible that this is not AI generated and their writing is just that bad.
That’s not too bad. The low estimates of megalodon do go as far down as 15 meters and fish can be variable in size depending on food availability so a small specimen being that length wouldn’t surprise me. Similar goes for the t.rex
2:32 this is literally the ark megalodon swimming animation. the stripes and everything are the exact same 5:39 THERE HE IS! THERES MY FAVOURITE ARK BOY 8:55 THERE HE IS AGAIN!
oh my fucking god is is the exact same fucking model as in ark lmfao guess i was right about me dreading the thought of them bringing up the tusoteuthis, thinking that the ark one is accurate when the real life one is extremely understudied with only the gladius being discovered, with a few things we know for complete certainty, such as it was quite far from being high on the food chain
Helicoprion only ate small squid and fish but people are thinking otherwise. And when I mean otherwise I mean the helicoprian time traveling and eating humans and megalodons and the only way you could survive a helicoprion attack is to write a book about it.
@@crime_dog27 im pretty sure there not part of any living species or genus since they have a distinct generic name of which all members are famous for being extinct
Man imagine if they paid money to generate these scripts, I'm assuming the guy talking in their videos is also just someone they pay to read the script. The fact there's so many channels like this doesn't surprise me in the slightest.
I know sooo many animals more dangerous than the Megalodon nowadays. First up: Gold fish. The odds getting killed by a gold fish is extremely low, but never zero, making it higher that the chance getting past tensed by a megalodon, because megalodons are extinct.
That guy's logic is basically: "if this animal eats an animal that dove down a lot, then that means the eater also dives down a lot" like just because approximately 3 people eat seals doesn't mean that the people dive 1300 meters down
Me sees sturgeon, my personal favorite fish: Why does this video have a sturgeon being eaten by a fang tooth in the Mariana Trench? Also me after looking closely at said sturgeons head: And why is it possessed by a demon?
That's because it's a different kind of fish called the deep sea lizardfish, which isn't actually a lizardfish. And as far as I'm aware, neither _Bathysaurus ferox_ nor either member of the genus _Anoplogaster_ have been found in the Mariana Trench. Though the common fangtooth (*Anoplogaster cornuta*) is deep-sea and is found above the Trench, among most sufficiently deep bodies of saltwater, so it's possible to have some actually in the Trench.
Be Amazed is one of the RUclipsrs that have odd animations... And clickbait Riddle What If Bright Side Be Amazed Smart Pizza Fact File Factsopedia And a few others I can’t think of currently Ps: The Mariana Trench is actually quite old, but geological processes would’ve eradicated most evidence 8:30 Mind. blown. Logic.
The plate that caused it is 190 million years old, and didn't have any subduction zones when it formed from between the Izanagi (subducted fully by ~95 million years ago), Farallon (remnants are Juan de Fuca, Explorer, Gorda, Cocos, and Nazca plates), and Phoenix (remnant is a small fragment incorporated within the Antarctic plate) plates. The Trench likely formed around when the Izanagi fully subducted.
8:20 so I'm taking a logic class right now and what's funny is an argument doesn't even have to make sense to be valid so long as the conclusion is true, but these people are so uneducated about marine life that the premises are true, but because their conclusion is false the argument is invalid. What I'm getting at is claims like these are easily disprovable yet, because people hear true statements mixed with a "logical" conclusion people treat them as valid and sound arguments despite being neither lmao.
Didn't prehistoric aquatic reptiles still breath oxygen??? So yeah living in any deep sea environment would be hazardous due to temperature pressure and ability to surface.
Actually, some fossils suggest an upper length limit of 7 meters for _Liopleurodon ferox._ There are no fossils suggesting any Liopleurodon ever reached 25 meters in length. Most fossils place the upper relatively common size for the _L. ferox_ at 6.39 meters long. However, even the largest known pliosaur has not reached 25 meters in length. 6.39 meters is 20'11.5748". Pachydeirus was smaller than ferox, but probably also reached the double digits in Imperial length.
Hainosaurus might not even have been a valid genus depending on who you ask, but if it was it was very much a shallow-water animal and not a diver. Their evidence is "it ate a sea turtle and sea turtles occasionally dive deep" but they also need to breathe?
Well, according to famed Meg expert, Steve Alten, there are not only Megalodons living in the Mariana Trench, but there are also several other prehistoric critters including Liopleurodons measuring to well over 120 feet in length. 122-foot-long Liopleurodons...that somehow evolved the ability to breath underwater. Yep. Ever since I was a infant I was obsessed with dinosaurs, playing with toy ones as young as 3-years-old - or at least that's what I've been told. I always wanted to be a paleontologist, and specifically wanted to study prehistoric marine life. Sadly, RL health issues prevented me from fulfilling my dream, but I still hold a strong interest in the subject. Which is why I love reading Steve Alten's books so much. Anytime I start to feel down in the dumps, I flip through one of his MEG installments and almost always end up with a serious case of the giggles within minutes of reading. His books are so absurdly exaggerated that anyone with even a smidgen of knowledge regarding Prehistoric marine life will either become enraged upon reading his work, or - like myself - just view it as a straight-up comedy.
Why did they name the deep-sea lizardfish, which is not actually a lizardfish, "fierce deep lizard"? It is probably similar in ferocity (or should I say, lack thereof) to the cheetah, and isn't a lizard.
.... but why is a sawfish in the video????? They weirdo sweet babies. And don't live that deep.... I would have thought I imagined it if not for Zak saying something.
Ah yes, Liopleurodon and the various species of mosasaur, the reptiles that secretly have mastered air bending to breathe at 10K m under the surface. Magic is truly a wonderful thing.
But then it all changed when the fire nation attacked...
How Ark teached us the liopleurodon is macical
“Magical liopleurodon, Charlie.”
@@drsharkboy6568 fuck! Beat me to it
Yeah those mesothermic monitor lizards that burn through all their oxygen super fast. Great choice of deep ocean animals.
The fish at 1:39 is actually a deep sea lizard fish, or Bathysaurus ferox. It has warm water counterparts that are much more colorful.
They even call it bathysaurus ferox which it sounds like it came from mesozoic
@@SirGoofyparrotfish Ferocious lizard of the bathyal zone. It has a nice ring to it.
Oh thank goodness. For a second there I thought SCP 682 escaped containment and adapted itself for deep sea survival
Lmao he was so angry at that poor fish 😂
I thought it was a Halosaur
1:57 That IS a real fish! It is a deep sea lizardfish Bathysaurus ferox. It’s not actually related to lizardfishes (Synodontidae), but that’s it’s common name
People are making too big a deal about the trench. It's not some magical place you find monsters, it's just the deepest part of the ocean where life barely exists due to the intense pressure.
And don't forget the lack of oxygen, food and temperature that's even remotely suitable for creatures of those sizes.
People are fascinated by extremes. Look how many fucking people climb mount Everest to the point where it's become a problem
@@CherryBomb_Games I am also fascinated by the Mariana Trench, but that doesn't mean that prehistoric monsters still live there.
@@mynamedoesntfi--6161 there's a quote a kind of live by: A person is smart, but people are dumb, panicky dangerous monsters.
@@CherryBomb_Games and how exactly does that prove prehistoric creatures live in the trench?
The fact that such videos exist for you to react is a grim evidence about humans clicking absolutely everything even moderately shiny on the internet while simultaneously having near-zero understanding of how science works.
Add to that that some of these channels are targeted at kids and people who do want to learn, and they may spread the misinformation unintentionally, and its a grand example of how content farms are the worst ;-;
Im holding out hope its still kids doing most of these
For the sake of my own sanity, I choose to believe that it’s either kids too young to understand or people watching it because it’s hilariously inaccurate
I wouldn't really call this a shiny key attempt this is more preying upon peoples momentary interest in something they know absolutely nothing about which is sad because it's usually children and young teenagers that click on this stuff learning absolute bs and then in doing so helping boost it past genuine sources of information on what ever topic leaving actual academic produced content and people who are just passionate about something and want to talk about what ever.
I think we can place most of the blame on RUclips itself and the creators. I’m 15, I grew up with RUclips, so I know when I was 10 I was definitely watching “top 10 real megaldon sightings”. Luckily I have always been into animal documentaries so I was never tricked into believing this conspiracy theory.
I love how the editor zoomed in on his head at 7:48 but left the word "vagina" at the top of Zac's head
lol
As far as I can tell, no fangtooth fish of either species have been found in the Mariana Trench, but it’s conceivable that some could live there.
But that’s only because they appear to live anywhere that’s deep enough besides the Southern Ocean, Arctic Ocean, and Mediterranean Sea. Especially the common fangtooth.
Dying for the ”Three thousers” 7:27
Ah yes, the Megladon. The thing that can control time and space and can travel forward to present day to live in the Mariana Trench.
Not to mention he can also apparently alter its entire biology, since it WAS originally a shark that lived in warm, somewhat shallow waters. Like yeah, body adapted for that sort of environment would do indeed very well in the depths of Mariana Trench.
@@veronikamajerova4564 correct, they were a warm water predator and could not tolerate colder water, which is speculated to be the exact cause for their extinction
@@Dr._Heinz_Doofenshmirtz Yep.
But... I have one question. Where is Perry?
@@veronikamajerova4564 in the mariana trench of course, trying to find my meggydon inator
You know it's gonna be good when the 3rd sentence starts with Mariana trench.
I honestly think AVNJ should do his own top 10 list
What makes the Hainosaurus bit even more depressing than it should be is the fact that Hainosaurus was synonymized with another Mosasaur named Tylosaurus. So he's essentially talking about a genus that possibly doesn't even exist anymore.
Yes, none of those animals exist anymore
@@filipbitala2624 I meant existing as in terms of name validity.
@@filipbitala2624 They exist, just not as living genera. Except for maybe Hainosaurus, which doesn't even have the "extinct" ecological status going for it currently. I say "maybe" because Brontosaurus re-established itself as an extinct genus, as opposed to a non-existent one. So there's a chance for Hainosaurus to at least have existence in the future.
Time to make an extinct animal top 10 list with Hainosaurus, Agathaumas, Monoclonius, Trachodon, Troodon, Dracorex, Stygimoloch, Predator X, Anatotitan, and Zunityrannus
Odobenocetops was a tusked cetacean with most fossil specimens having one tusk longer than the other. Only very few had both tusk of equal length. It is believed their tusk were either for display or as sensory organs.
6:55 (Odobenocetops) is a Whale species, (Odobenocetops) basic translation is Tooth walking whale, it's believed the tusks (they had two tusks but one was way longer than the other), was used in the same manner as Walrus tusks, to scrap though the sea bed etc for Mollusks. It's closest living relatives (but in two different families) is the Baluga-Whale and Nar-Whale.
So crazy that the dude said a MAMMAL might have lived in the Mariana Trench…
What floors me is that they think Odobenocetops, a very small marine mammal, would have the lung capacity to make it to the bottom of the challenger deep just so they could eat a couple clams before making the trip all the way back up before they drown, as if the pressure and cold temperature wouldn't kill it long before that point.
You have no idea how happy I am that an actual professional is taking these videos down a peg
Ah yes, Helicogunprion. My favorite extinct fish.
"All the fossils we've found of these organisms are not from the trench."
1. Doing a fossil dig in 11 km of water is not easy.
2. The crust in the east end of the trench is being convected down into the Earth. Your Mariana mosasaurs might well be one million meters under Asia! How are you going to do a fossil dig through a million meters of rock?
I was so irrationally upset when video said that quad flipper locomotion was inefficient
These videos remind me of highschool projects where it doesn’t have to make sense, just look and sound good
What makes the Helicoprion part extra stupid is that Helicoprion went extinct before the Pacific plate even existed. How can you live in a trench formed by the subduction of a tectonic plate that didn't exist until 35 million years after the last of your kind died? The oldest Pacific crust is just east of the Mariana Trench, by the way.
Well I certainly had a good time, the tusk manatee really blew my socks off I never expected the Trench of be such a lively place full of oysters and tusk manatees !
I really love the logic of "we barely explore the sea, who knows what creature would live there" and immediately assuming that some kind of prehistoric beast are still exists right under our nose
Ooh yeah odobenocetops the sea creature which baby megalodon most likely preyed upon. So much scarier than any other sea creature. Also the massive inverted tusk wouldn't have been for defense it probably wouldve been for breaking mollusc shells, intimation or just display.
Seeing the thumbnail I knew I was loving this video espically
8:31 Ironically, we humans have been down in the trench.
Person 1: "So our list starts with the Fangtooth.. What's next on the list?"
Person 2: "........It's a Liopleurodon..."
Person 1: "What?"
Person 2: "... A Magical Liopleurodon..."
Aleast the helicoprion is getting some appreciation
"We don't know what's in the mariana trench, there could be horrific monsters down there!!"
cut to a dumbo octopus looking so damn cute it could be mistaken for a kids toy.
The thumbnail of a helicoprion with a gun is perfect.
Eyyy something perfect to watch while we all suffer from Discord's outage
They told us to go outside on Twitter, I don't think I wanna tho
Hello there fellow partner
The best simile for this stupid argument of "But it could exist somewhere, because there's loads of space for it to hide!" is the assumption that Snow White was a true story, because her body could be buried somewhere and everyone else has to prove it is actually nowhere.
Marylanders eat clam chowder
All who feed on molluscs dwell in the Mariana Trench
Clams are molluscs
Mary and Mariana both derive primarily from the Hebrew name Maryam
Maryland is the Mariana Trench
3:50 "some scientists believe it used it's nostrils to smell things"....ya don't say..
The fish that was being factory reset by the fangtooth is probably either a tripod fish or a deep sea lizard fish
“Lived in the shallow waters of Europe and North America”
Ok ignoring you just said SHALLOW WATERS!?!?
You said Europe and North America:/
Is the Mariana Trench even remotely close to those areas if it even existed at that time!?!?
Hey AVNJ,
Soooooo the weird fish at 1:53 is called a Deepsea Lizardfish, they basically have teeth on top of their teeth, therefore having the same dental plan as Shin Godzilla
Back to that fucking trench. BEWARE THE SNAILFISH
The png of the weird fish in the fang tooth section of the video is a deep sea lizard fish for anyone who doesn’t know :)
2:31 that footage of the megalodon swimming was literally from ark survival evolved 😭 they’re using video game footage in their videos
The funniest thing was that the Megalodon model was from ARK and if you’re getting science stuff from the game where the Meg is no bigger than a great white and smaller than a plesiosaur then just oof. Also ARK bruh that models not even great and I have 1500+ hours on the game so yk I love it.
To be fair, Ark has an excuse for the bad represention in its lore (pretty sure they recreate some of the creatures from humanity's medias, and also being ingenireed modified sub-species or artificial evolutions. (Irk, pretty sure the canonical biologist of the lore is "this is wrong. That's not normal. This biosphere shouldn't exist" on the first story map)
10 Sea Creatures More Terrifying than Megalodon---->Video begins with a fish that is not remotely dangerous
Yep, this is a Top 10 video alright.
In their defense, terrifying and dangerous are not synonymous
@@SalmonRow True, but honestly, some animals get bad raps just because they look scary, even if they're harmless.
Liopleurodon had lungs and needed to get to the surface to brethe we would know if it was still alive.
But maybe it has evolved gills! *Whineinscientificallyilliterate*
youtube is drunk and saying it has 1 reply while there wasn't one so i will now fill that slot
"This shark is similar to marine reptiles because it ate fish!"
Okay, you know what that line reminds me of? When I was in my early college days, I took on a job as an editor for this guy who I later found out what bulk publishing crappy supernatural romance fiction on Amazon. He had one section of his book where he described this monster has being twice as big as a person with chalk white skin, horns, claws, and fangs (and some other details I don't remember because it was a long time ago) and then after this description proceeded to say, "but it had two arms, two legs, and a head, so you could easily mistake it for a person."
I quit after finishing the first books because the whole book was like that. So, it's possible that this is not AI generated and their writing is just that bad.
OH GOD ITS GOT A GUN
Odobenocetops is a whale.
Yes, a whale. :)
>be me
>Watching this while fishing
>Profit
3:20 why did he do this to my favorite marine reptile?! Why?!
"The Megalodon is 10 meters long as long as a T.rex" Just throw logic out the window
That’s not too bad. The low estimates of megalodon do go as far down as 15 meters and fish can be variable in size depending on food availability so a small specimen being that length wouldn’t surprise me. Similar goes for the t.rex
2:32 this is literally the ark megalodon swimming animation. the stripes and everything are the exact same
5:39 THERE HE IS! THERES MY FAVOURITE ARK BOY
8:55 THERE HE IS AGAIN!
oh my fucking god
is is the exact same fucking model as in ark lmfao
guess i was right about me dreading the thought of them bringing up the tusoteuthis, thinking that the ark one is accurate when the real life one is extremely understudied with only the gladius being discovered, with a few things we know for complete certainty, such as it was quite far from being high on the food chain
@@Dr._Heinz_Doofenshmirtz lol
Remember that David Wellington killed off all the extinct creatures on this list
Helicoprion only ate small squid and fish but people are thinking otherwise. And when I mean otherwise I mean the helicoprian time traveling and eating humans and megalodons and the only way you could survive a helicoprion attack is to write a book about it.
And they aren’t sharks. They’re known as a part of the sawfish species.
@@crime_dog27 im pretty sure there not part of any living species or genus since they have a distinct generic name of which all members are famous for being extinct
5:34 “sea turtles go deep sometimes and it ate one” Sea turtles Breathe Air !
It's that classic Doctor Who quote, "Nelly is an elephant, Nelly is pink. Thus all elephants are pink."
Which episode/Doctor?
Tom Baker talking to Davros in Destiny of the Daleks I believe@@idle_speculation
@@idle_speculation Tom Baker, talking to Davros in Destiny of the Daleks
Man imagine if they paid money to generate these scripts, I'm assuming the guy talking in their videos is also just someone they pay to read the script. The fact there's so many channels like this doesn't surprise me in the slightest.
That guy is no scientist he's not buff enough
micro-small organismzilla
1:46 is a real fish, it's called a bathysaurus, and no, it is not an extinct marine reptile, that is its actual name :)
Bathysaurus? Cute name
Dude said that the Meg is about 10m long and as large as a T-Rex while in reality on average T-Rex was 12-13m long
For the Fangtooth, you should have searched up “Fangtooth Fish Habitat”
I know sooo many animals more dangerous than the Megalodon nowadays.
First up: Gold fish.
The odds getting killed by a gold fish is extremely low, but never zero, making it higher that the chance getting past tensed by a megalodon, because megalodons are extinct.
thumbnail got a chuckle out of me
the odobenocetops tusk was used for mating
The thumbnail *IS* more terrifying
7:45
Above his head lmao
That guy's logic is basically: "if this animal eats an animal that dove down a lot, then that means the eater also dives down a lot"
like just because approximately 3 people eat seals doesn't mean that the people dive 1300 meters down
i really love your video, just wanted to let you know!
By the way, the abomination at 1:48 is an actual deep sea fish called the lizard fish
You find fangtooth fish (they are small and more comical than scary) in many parts of the world if not almost everywhere.
Me sees sturgeon, my personal favorite fish: Why does this video have a sturgeon being eaten by a fang tooth in the Mariana Trench?
Also me after looking closely at said sturgeons head: And why is it possessed by a demon?
That's because it's a different kind of fish called the deep sea lizardfish, which isn't actually a lizardfish. And as far as I'm aware, neither _Bathysaurus ferox_ nor either member of the genus _Anoplogaster_ have been found in the Mariana Trench. Though the common fangtooth (*Anoplogaster cornuta*) is deep-sea and is found above the Trench, among most sufficiently deep bodies of saltwater, so it's possible to have some actually in the Trench.
I saw a song thrush at the bottom of the mariana trench once!
Be Amazed is one of the RUclipsrs that have odd animations...
And clickbait
Riddle
What If
Bright Side
Be Amazed
Smart Pizza
Fact File
Factsopedia
And a few others I can’t think of currently
Ps: The Mariana Trench is actually quite old, but geological processes would’ve eradicated most evidence
8:30 Mind. blown. Logic.
The plate that caused it is 190 million years old, and didn't have any subduction zones when it formed from between the Izanagi (subducted fully by ~95 million years ago), Farallon (remnants are Juan de Fuca, Explorer, Gorda, Cocos, and Nazca plates), and Phoenix (remnant is a small fragment incorporated within the Antarctic plate) plates. The Trench likely formed around when the Izanagi fully subducted.
8:21 this reminds me of that one guy that used to prove that people were apart of the illuminati with the smallest evidence ever
8:20 so I'm taking a logic class right now and what's funny is an argument doesn't even have to make sense to be valid so long as the conclusion is true, but these people are so uneducated about marine life that the premises are true, but because their conclusion is false the argument is invalid. What I'm getting at is claims like these are easily disprovable yet, because people hear true statements mixed with a "logical" conclusion people treat them as valid and sound arguments despite being neither lmao.
I almost laughed at 7:50 because my sense of humor is so dumb look above his head
U need to start looking at the comments on these vids 🤣🤣🤣 and I just had to pause at 7:44 🤣🤣🤣
1:08 haha Fangtoot
That is a beautiful thumbnail
Your my favorite RUclipsr right now lol
They're mainly using ark megalodons which lived exclusively in the shallower water in-game
As this point, you could put all these reaction videos together into one folder and call it "fish fanfiction".
The scariest fish is a helicoprion with a gun
I remember when "Be Amazed" had videos, kinda full of info. I miss that.
Didn't prehistoric aquatic reptiles still breath oxygen??? So yeah living in any deep sea environment would be hazardous due to temperature pressure and ability to surface.
I love fact that the Liopeurodon there thinking of is from WWD when there like 5 feet long.
Actually, some fossils suggest an upper length limit of 7 meters for _Liopleurodon ferox._ There are no fossils suggesting any Liopleurodon ever reached 25 meters in length. Most fossils place the upper relatively common size for the _L. ferox_ at 6.39 meters long. However, even the largest known pliosaur has not reached 25 meters in length. 6.39 meters is 20'11.5748". Pachydeirus was smaller than ferox, but probably also reached the double digits in Imperial length.
1:51 I believe it’s a lizard fish
Fossils of the helicoprion have been found in Kansas. I just facepalmed to hard I possibly gave myself brain damage.
Hainosaurus might not even have been a valid genus depending on who you ask, but if it was it was very much a shallow-water animal and not a diver. Their evidence is "it ate a sea turtle and sea turtles occasionally dive deep" but they also need to breathe?
goes to Wikipedia
"doesn't say"
gives up searching
I know that Big Don lurks there somewhere... Probably inside in the Mariana trench.
Well, according to famed Meg expert, Steve Alten, there are not only Megalodons living in the Mariana Trench, but there are also several other prehistoric critters including Liopleurodons measuring to well over 120 feet in length.
122-foot-long Liopleurodons...that somehow evolved the ability to breath underwater.
Yep.
Ever since I was a infant I was obsessed with dinosaurs, playing with toy ones as young as 3-years-old - or at least that's what I've been told. I always wanted to be a paleontologist, and specifically wanted to study prehistoric marine life.
Sadly, RL health issues prevented me from fulfilling my dream, but I still hold a strong interest in the subject.
Which is why I love reading Steve Alten's books so much.
Anytime I start to feel down in the dumps, I flip through one of his MEG installments and almost always end up with a serious case of the giggles within minutes of reading.
His books are so absurdly exaggerated that anyone with even a smidgen of knowledge regarding Prehistoric marine life will either become enraged upon reading his work, or - like myself - just view it as a straight-up comedy.
Ah yes, the Walking With Dinosaurs Liopleurodon
Wait… if we eat mallusks… then we also live in the Mariana Trench.
My cats are scarier than the Megalodon, because they still exist.
1:43 is a deep sea lizard fish
Wait a minute...a Liopleurodon would need to be magical to live in the trench...a magical Liopleurodon...Charlie?!
The fish that the fangtooth bit is a deep-sea lizard fish aka bathysaurus ferox
Why did they name the deep-sea lizardfish, which is not actually a lizardfish, "fierce deep lizard"? It is probably similar in ferocity (or should I say, lack thereof) to the cheetah, and isn't a lizard.
Maybe why should ask the ichthyologists that named it lol
7:05 I think that's a walrus
4:32 Plus they needed to breathe AIR!
Drink everytime "Mariana Trench" is mentioned
.... but why is a sawfish in the video????? They weirdo sweet babies. And don't live that deep.... I would have thought I imagined it if not for Zak saying something.