The massive invertebrates may have been top predators, according to an analysis of their fossilized jaws. The work suggests ...
Researchers discovered evidence of enormous Kraken-like creatures who hunted in the seas some 100 million years ago, ...
The ancient cephalopod, Nanaimoteuthis haggarti, appears to have been an apex predator that rivaled mosasaurs to rule ...
Giant octopuses may have ruled the oceans 100 million years ago, according to fossil evidence.
During the Cretaceous, 19-metre-long predatory octopuses swam the seas, and evidence from their fossilised remains suggest ...
The discovery challenges a 370-million-year-old assumption that only vertebrates could be top ocean predators.
The kraken: a giant squid or octopus of myth, seems to have swam in the Cretaceous oceans, a Japanese study shows.
The top predator prowling the seas during the age of the dinosaurs 100 million years ago may have been an octopus.
The now-extinct mollusk may have reached up to 60 feet in length, researchers have found ...
New analyses of fossilized jaws reveal that massive, kraken-like octopuses once hunted alongside other marine predators.
Fossil research shows that an enormous "kraken-like" octopus stalked the seas during the Cretaceous period, competing with large apex predators.
The color-changing, jet-propelling giant Pacific Octopus is a brainy beauty that can disappear in the blink of an eye." ...