Monster Sharks: Four Fierce Giants That Rival Greenland's Ancient Beast

Sharks have been making headlines recently after a 2016 report of a Greenland shark that was around 512 years old resurfaced this week. In November, a dinosaur-era frilled shark was on our minds. The ocean’s deadliest sharp-toothed predator are both loved and feared. They are also an incredibly diverse and successful group, appearing in the fossil records millions of years before dinosaurs and even insects.

Here are just a few of the most terrifying examples of sharks from across time.

MegalodonMegalodon

Only the jaws of megalodon fossilized, but put to the scale of a great white shark, this prehistoric creature must have grown to 60 feet long. Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Megalodon
Carcharocles megalodon is the star of such B-thrillers as Shark Attack 3: Megalodon, Megashark vs. Mechashark, and Attack of the Jurassic Shark. Before its movie days, real megalodons lived all over the world in the Miocene and Pliocene epochs.

Megalodon would have put the shark in Jaws to shame, with teeth as big as your your hand and a body as long as a bowling lane. Sixty feet of shark is nothing to mess with, and it probably ate whales.  

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HelicoprionHelicoprion
Helicoprion

Helicoprion was an ancient ratfish, not a shark, but was just as scary, with a whorl of teeth like a buzz saw. WILLIAM WEST/AFP/Getty Images

Helicoprion
Though not technically a shark, this shark-like ratfish had an unforgettable maw. Scientists first found this animal’s teeth in a bizarre spiral, and for years, they could only speculate as to how the teeth actually fit in its mouth.

Luckily for swimmers, it lived and died 270 million years ago.

A Thresher shark hunts fish by whipping its long tail at a school. PLOS Media

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Whip-tailed shark
Also known as a common-thresher, Zorro thresher shark, swiveltail, and slasher, this modern shark makes the list for its odd hunting style. This shark swims toward schools of fish, then at the last minute, whips its bizarrely long tail at its prey to stun or kill them.
 

Whale_sharkWhale_shark
Whale_shark

This picture taken on August 1, 2014 shows a dead whale shark being carried on a tractor in a seafood wholesale market in Xiangzhi township in Quanzhou, east China’s Fujian province. Local fishermen caught the whale shark which they thought was a ‘sea monster’ and reported to local police after returning from the sea, local media reported. STR/AFP/Getty Images

Whale Shark
You would think that the largest living shark would be the most terrifying. This monster can weigh 20 tons and grow 18-32 feet long. But these wide-mouthed creatures, with spots on their backs resembling constellations in the night sky, have very small teeth and eat only plankton.
 

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512-Year-Old Greenland shark
In 2016, scientists documented the world’s oldest living vertebrate: a Greenland shark that had been alive for 512 years, give or take. While other long-lived animals have been discovered, a shark that has lived for half of a millennium takes the cake for incredible survival skills.  

11_10_Frilled_shark_head211_10_Frilled_shark_head2
11_10_Frilled_shark_head2

This living fossil has remained unchanged for 80 million years. By OpenCage (http://opencage.info/pics.e/large_13408.asp) [CC BY-SA 2.5 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5)], via Wikimedia Commons

Frilled Shark
The frilled shark is even older than megalodon, having evolved 80 million years ago. But the especially concerning thing about the frilled shark is that they still exist .

Fortunately frilled sharks live deep in the ocean and aren’t known to attack humans. If they did, their rows of extremely-sharp teeth would be sure to leave a mark.

This article was first written by Newsweek

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