phillyflyers
phillyflyers
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2024
- Messages
- 12,370
What act?Your act is getting way too old.
What act?Your act is getting way too old.
I'm guessing like the sea.I wonder what is tastes like? If we can catch one.
The problem is these predators are never seen and are only known after they attack and kill something.you should send all this info to the Whitehouse and I bet President Trump could be convinced to make you Marine Predator defense Csar
"Woke at dawn, found starboard rail bent and torn, boards scored as if gripped by immense jaws. Crew missing livestock, but no sign save slime over the wood and deep indentations beyond obvious explanation. The bite, if that’s what it was, measured half a yard across at the widest, curving deep into the soft pine as if from prodigious teeth unlike any shark or whale."
—Journal entry, Barque Valiant, 1813
"Awoke to tremendous shudder of hull, ran out to face the port side crushed inward at waterline, a gash there almost circular, stretching three feet stem to stern. Timber bitten clean through and splintered, not sheared; marks indicated teeth set a handspan apart around the radius, something very large, far bigger than any fish."
—Captain’s log, schooner Marguerite, June 1902
"Sonar dome retrieved with five distinct arc-shaped gouges, each measuring approximately 14 inches wide, lining up in a near semicircle. Technician records: ‘Spacing consistent with jaws spanning a minimum of four feet. Not known from local marine fauna. Edges of gouges rough, as if from serrated teeth or hard beaks.’"
—Field notes, Dr. L. Macready, Unknown Depths Project, Nova Scotia, 1967
"Panel damage described as ‘single, immense bite’, curvature estimated at between 1.1 and 1.4 meters. Depth suggests apex predator, not human activity nor equipment collision—material scraped and torn but not fragmented; indentation depth uneven, some sections pierced nearly through hull."
—Anonymous marine engineering report fragment, archived in cryptid research collections