The Megalodon is an extinct megatoothed shark from prehistoric seas and was 20.3 meters or 67 feet long.
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Related Images
- Seals race to get away from a giant Megalodon shark coming after them.
- A huge Megalodon shark swims after a pod of Striped dolphins.
- Several Tuna fish try to escape from a huge Megalodon shark in prehistoric times.
- The Megalodon shark was an enormous predator in the Cenozoic Period of prehistoric Earth.
- The Megalodon is an extinct megatoothed shark that existed in prehistoric times, from the Oligocene to the Pleistocene Epochs.
- The Megalodon is an extinct megatoothed shark that existed in prehistic times, from the Oligocene to the Pleistocene Epochs.
- Megalodon is an extinct species of shark that grew to 18 meters or 59ft and lived in the Cenozoic Era.
- A school of ocean fish encounter a monstrous Megalodon shark in prehistoric times.
More Related Images
- The Megalodon was the most powerful predator in the seas of the Cenozoic Era of Earth's history. Here he devours two swift swimming tuna in one large gulp. This shark was 16 metres or 52 feet long and its teeth remain in fossil beds.
- A school of Black-backed Butterflyfish swim away from two Great White Sharks swimming over a reef.
- A school of swift swimming Blue-Fin Tuna fish provoke the curiosity of a Great White Shark.
- The Great White Shark is the largest predatory shark in the ocean and can grow to 26 feet and can live for 70 years.
- A school of Yellowfin tuna is followed by a Great White shark waiting for his opportunity to strike.
- The Great White Shark can live for more than 70 years and reach a length of 8 meters or 26 feet.
- The Great White Shark is an apex-predator and has several sets of teeth which replace themselves continuously.
- Megalodon shark was very much like our Great White shark but a much larger size with razor sharp teeth.