The first shark ever documented in Antarctic waters was captured on camera at 1,600 feet deep in near-freezing temperatures.
Filmed in January 2025, the camera operated by the Minderoo-UWA Deep-Sea Research Centre was positioned off the South Shetland Islands near the Antarctic Peninsula.
Stories by SWNS on MSNOpinion
Shark spotted 500m deep in Antarctica’s near-freezing waters for first time ever
A sleeper shark gliding through near-freezing depths off Antarctica marks the first confirmed sighting of its kind in the ...
Sharks are ancient creatures—even older than land dinosaurs —and they’ve evolved to swim in almost all the world’s ocean waters. Still, many scientists suspected that the animals didn’t live in ...
Researchers spotted a shark off the Antarctic Peninsula for the first time ever, swimming at a depth so deep the sun could ...
The first shark ever documented in Antarctic waters was captured on camera at 1,600 feet deep in near-freezing temperatures.
A deep-sea camera has captured rare footage of a large sleeper shark in Antarctic waters, challenging long-held assumptions ...
A persistent "gravity hole" beneath Antarctica gives scientists a window into Earth's deep interior, showing how processes ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Antarctica’s wild ‘gravity hole’ uncovers of Earth’s deep core evolution
A region beneath Antarctica where Earth’s gravitational pull is measurably weaker than anywhere else on the planet has persisted for roughly 70 million years, according to new research that traces the ...
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