Tag Archives: nature’s mysteries

Kraken rises: New fossil evidence of ‘sea monster’

Kraken rises: New fossil evidence of ‘sea monster’

By Stephanie Pappas

Nature’s Mysteries

Published November 01, 2013

LiveScience
  • Pirates of the Caribbean Kraken

    The Kraken destroys the Edinburgh Trader in the film, “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest.” (WALT DISNEY PICTURES)

  • kraken-beak

    This fossil discovered in Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park in Nevada may be part of the beak of an ancient giant cephalopod, such as an octopus or squid. (MARK MCMENAMIN)

DENVER –  Did a giant kraken troll the Triassic seas, crushing ichthyosaurs and arranging their bones into pleasing patterns?

It sounds like a Halloween tale, but researchers who first suggested the existence of this ancient sea monster in 2011 say they now have more evidence backing up their controversial theory. Not only have they discovered a second example of strangely arranged bones, they’ve found a fossil that appears to be the beak of an ancient squid or octopus.

“This was extremely good luck,” said Mark McMenamin, a paleontologist at Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts who presented his here Wednesday at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America (GSA). “This was finding the needle in the haystack, really.” [See Images of New ‘Kraken’ Fossils & Lair]

Still, the kraken theory has not gained widespread acceptance.

“A kraken isn’t really necessary,” said David Fastovsky, a paleontologist at the University of Rhode Island who attended McMenamin’s GSA presentation and penned a response to the evidence for the Paleontological Society. “Everything can be explained by much less exotic means.”

Kraken controversy
McMenamin caused a splash when he and his colleagues first floated the idea of the kraken at a GSA meeting in 2011. The evidence: A bizarre arrangement of vertebrae of the ichthyosaur Shonisaurus popularis found in Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park in Nevada.

‘When I saw that photograph, basically my eyeballs popped out.’

– Mark McMenamin, a paleontologist at Mount Holyoke College in Massachusett 

S. popularis was a school-bus-size, flippered marine reptile that lived during the Triassic period, 250 million to 200 million years ago. The bones of one of these ichthyosaurs were found in a strange linear pattern. McMenamin and his colleagues argued that they were arranged there by a giant cephalopod (an octopus or squid) playing with its food.

This hypothesis isn’t quite as out there as it may seem: Modern octopuses are known to manipulate bones, shells and other debris to form middens, concealing the entrances to their dens. And today’s giant squid are known to battle it out with sperm whales, as evidenced by tentacle scars found on whales and squid found in whale stomachs. The bone arrangements could be the earliest evidence of cephalopod intelligence, McMenamin said. [Release the Kraken! Giant Squid Photos]

Still, the idea engendered a lot of backlash. Glenn Storrs, the curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Cincinnati Museum Center, summed up the skepticism to LiveScience in 2011, calling the weird bone arrangement “circumstantial evidence.”

The kraken is back

Now, McMenamin has more. First, he argues, the arrangement of bones could not have been made by natural processes like currents or mud compaction. The shape of the bones is such that there is “virtually zero” probability that currents could have nudged them into that arrangement, McMenamin told a crowded auditorium of geoscientists at this year’s meeting.

“You always go from a more ordered to a less ordered state, not the other way around,” he said.

The organized state of the bones is the strongest evidence that some intelligent creature arranged them, McMenamin told LiveScience. But something else came up that has him convinced: A second example of the weird bone pattern.

This one comes from an ichthyosaur fossil formerly on display at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas Museum of Natural History. The fossil had been laid out in the museum exactly as found in the field. The exhibit is long gone now, but a curator passed a photo on to McMenamin.

“When I saw that photograph, basically my eyeballs popped out,” McMenamin told LiveScience.

Next to the ichthyosaur was a “debris pile” of scattered bones that were no longer in their proper place in the skeleton. And off to the side was a double row of vertebrae in the same configuration as McMenamin and his colleagues had seen in the original ichthyosaur remains.

The rib cage of the museum specimen shows damage, as if something perhaps the tentacles of a giant deep-sea monster? had constricted them in a bear hug.

“We think one plausible explanation of this is an attack on the icthyosaur by a much larger predator,” McMenamin said.

A smoking gun?
Once he saw the museum photograph, McMenamin made a field expedition back to Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park, where he and his colleagues combed through fossils weathering out of rock in search of more cephalopod evidence. Almost unbelievably, they found it.

Among the fossils the team collected on their trip was a strange, pointed object that McMenamin almost tossed, thinking it might be a fish. But the fossil had un-fish-like fibers running through it, so he hung on to it. Months later, he bought a modern Humboldt squid beak off eBay for $60 and compared it to the ancient fossil.

The fracturing patterns and fibers matched. McMenamin thinks he has the beak of an elusive Triassic kraken.

The fossil “shows that indeed there were giant cephalopods in this area,” he said.

Or Not… ?
If the fossil is indeed a beak, it’s too fragmentary to prove the size of the cephalopod it belonged to, Fastovsky told LiveScience. He found the rest of McMenamin’s new evidence similarly unconvincing.

The measurement McMenamin used to dismiss the notion of currents moving the bones was “absolutely inapproprriate for the question he is addressing,” Fastovsky said. The analysis measures the probabiliy of a point in a circle falling in a certain pie-slice of that circle, he said, not the relative stability of vertebrae in currents. In fact, Fastovsky said, little is known about the currents of the time, and no one has ever measured what it would take to shuffle vertebral fragments around.

Fastovsky also pushed back against the modern analogues for the hypothetical kraken’s behavior. Octopus middens aren’t organized in nice rows, he said. They’re piles of debris. And sperm whales attack squid, not the other way around.

There’s a simpler explaination, Fastovsky said. Ichthyosaurs die. They sink to the bottom, where scavengers get to work stripping their skeletons of flesh. The tendons and ligaments that held the vertebrae together rot away or are eaten.

“What happens to that vertebral column?” Fastovsky said. “Well, the first thing that happens is it sort of starts to fall over almost like a row of dominoes.”

The weird tiled position actually appears to be the most stable position for those falling dominoes to end up at rest, Fastovsky said.

“A perfectly reasonable, pedestrian, coherant story emerges that doesn’t require wholesale invention of what is unknown or unprecendented,” he said.

McMenamin says he hopes for more debate on his findings. So far, he said, the response to his talk has been positive.

“We’re getting a message from the past,” he said, “So I’m hoping the discussion is better this time.”

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Vampire bones found

‘Vampire’ bones found at Polish construction site

Nature’s Mysteries

Published July 12, 2013

FoxNews.com
  • Count Dracula
    Universal Pictures

Planning to visit Poland soon? Beware of the vampires.

Well, not really.

According to the Telegraph, skeletons were found with their heads removed and placed on their legs in the Polish town of Gliwice.

This gruesome burial is evidence that the victims had been accused of being a vampire and thus subjected to an execution ritual — murdered and mutilated, to make sure that the undead stayed dead.

It’s not clear when the bodies were buried. One archeologist at the site said they had no belt buckles, buttons or other adornments that could help determine their era. Historians say the practice of killing accused vampires was common in Slavic lands after the adoption of Christianity, the Telegraph reported.

Sometimes, those accused of being vampires were simply decapitated, while others would be hung from a gibbet (a gallows of sorts) until the head separated from the body. Then, the heads were placed on the legs to deter the so-called “creatures of the night” from rising from their graves.

Found during the construction of a road near Gliwice in southern Poland, the bodies left archaeologists surprised: They were used to finding remains of WWII soldiers — not “vampire” skeletons.

Unlike the pale, blood-thirsty creatures depicted in numerous television shows, books and movies, the definition of a vampire in the Middle Ages was much broader. In those times, a vampire could be anyone who still held pagan beliefs, according to the Telegraph.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/12/polish-archeologists-find-vampires-at-construction-site/?intcmp=trending#ixzz2ZBBwiy14

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Release the Kraken!

‘Kraken’ caught on film at last

Nature’s Mysteries

Published January 07, 2013

FoxNews.com

  • giant squid filmed.jpg

    Footage captured by NHK and Discovery Channel in July 2012 shows a giant squid in the sea near Chichi island. (NHK/NEP/Discovery Channel)

  • giant squid filmed 2.jpg

    Footage captured by NHK and Discovery Channel in July 2012 shows a giant squid in the sea’s depths. (NHK/NEP/Discovery Channel)

The elusive giant squid, which can grow to a monstrous 26 feet in length and is likely the source of the Nordic legend of the kraken, has been captured on film at last.

The creature spends its days trawling the depths of the Pacific Ocean, at a depth where there is little oxygen or light and crushing pressure from the immense weight of the water above. It was spied by Japan’s National Science Museum, working in tandem with Japanese broadcaster NHK and the Discovery Channel, according to AFP.

‘It was shining and so beautiful.’

– Museum researcher Tsunemi Kubodera 

“It was shining and so beautiful,” museum researcher Tsunemi Kubodera told AFP. “I was so thrilled when I saw it first hand, but I was confident we would because we rigorously researched the areas we might find it, based on past data.”

The immense creature, which has razor-toothed suckers and eyes the size of dinner plates, has been the subject of fables and fairy tales since ancient times. The Norse legend of the sea monster and the Scylla from Greek mythology might have derived from the giant squid.

This is the first recorded footage of the giant squid in its natural habitat, squid specialist Kudobera said. He also filmed what he says was the first live video footage of a giant squid in 2006, but only from his boat after it was hooked and brought up to the surface.

“Researchers around the world have tried to film giant squid in their natural habitats, but all attempts were in vain before,” Kubodera said.

The squid was spotted at a depth of around 2,000 feet using a submersible in July, about 10 miles east of Chichi island in the north Pacific Ocean.

“With this footage we hope to discover more about the life of the species,” he told AFP, adding that he planned to publish his findings soon.

Discovery Channel will air the footage in the special “Monster Squid: The Giant Is Real,” on Sunday, Jan. 27 at 10PM EST.

“Our crew came face-to-face with the giant squid, and it’s the ideal season finale for our ‘Curiousity’ series that stirs the imagination of our audience, bravely asking questions and fearlessly seeking answers. This latest production, four years in the making, is a world-first achievement for television, and I’m excited to share it,” said Eileen O’Neill, group president of Discovery and TLC Networks.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/01/07/kraken-caught-on-film-at-last/?intcmp=features#ixzz2IUF6Eot1

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