The first shark ever documented in Antarctic waters was captured on camera at 1,600 feet deep in near-freezing temperatures.
A sleeper shark gliding through near-freezing depths off Antarctica marks the first confirmed sighting of its kind in the region. Researchers with the University of Western Australia captured the ...
Scientists have captured footage of a sleeper shark farther south than ever before, suggesting Antarctica’s Southern Ocean is ...
Jessica Kolbusz — an oceanographer at the Minderoo-University of Western Australia Deep-Sea Research Center — spotted an ...
Many experts had thought sharks did not exist in the frigid waters of Antarctica before this sleeper shark lumbered warily ...
A skate appears in frame motionless on the seabed and seemingly unperturbed by the passing shark. The skate, a shark relative ...
Researchers filmed a 10-to-13-foot sleeper shark off the South Shetland Islands, in what may be the first recording of the ...
Scientists have captured the first-ever footage of a rare southern sleeper shark in Antarctic waters, reshaping what we know ...
A baited camera captured a sleeper shark in the Southern Ocean for the first time. Sharks have survived mass extinctions, ...
Antarctica has always been the ultimate gatekeeper. Its waters are famously shark-free, or so ...
Scientists record the first shark in Antarctic waters at 1,600 feet, revealing new evidence of deep-sea life in one of the coldest oceans.
A slow-moving sleeper shark captured on camera deep below the ocean surface near the South Shetland Islands is the first shark species to ever be found in Antarctic waters.