*Refers to the latest 2 years of stltoday.com stories. Cancel anytime. Deep-sea researchers have achieved a sensation: for the first time, they have been able to film a colossus squid alive in its ...
For the first time, scientists have captured footage of a colossal squid (Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni) in its natural habitat. This particular colossal squid was only a juvenile, however. It measured ...
Colossal squid are known to be elusive and likely avoid the bright and loud research equipment used underwater. A colossal squid is filmed in its natural habitat for the first time A colossal squid ...
On a March day in one of the most remote corners of the planet, a myth rose from the deep. SuBastian did it again! Roughly 600 meters beneath the icy waves near the South Sandwich Islands, the ...
Viewers of a deep-sea livestream got the thrill of a lifetime when cameras captured the first confirmed video of a colossal squid in its natural habitat. As The Conversation reported, the animal was ...
Dr. Michelle Taylor and her team captured the first-ever footage of a colossal squid during their deep-sea expedition in the south Atlantic Ocean.
The colossal squid, the world’s largest squid species, was caught on video for the first time swimming in its natural habitat, according to a California ocean research organization. This squid, as its ...
The 30cm-long (11.8in) juvenile was spotted at a depth of 600m (1,968ft), near the South Sandwich Islands in the south ...
The colossal squid was identified and named 100 years ago, but humans have never actually seen one swimming around in its natural habitat. A remotely operated vehicle deployed from the Schmidt Ocean ...
A colossal squid has been caught on camera for the first time in the deep sea by an international team of researchers steering a remotely operated submersible. The sighting was announced Tuesday by ...
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