http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/trendin...-search-for-new-super-predator-185347878.html Might be nothing, but cool (short) read
hmmm kinda cool. Very brief analysis during our bathroom break but this link http://www.elasmo-research.org/education/white_shark/p_body_temp.htm shows a GW body temp is about 10% higher than water temp. A warm-blooded orca has a much higher body temp you can see in this search. https://www.google.com/search?q=bod...la:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&channel=sb. The article says the temp jumped from 46 to 78 degrees but I didn't see anything about the water temp. Seems warm-blooded based on the 30 degree temp change.
Dude I soooo hope it's The Kraken! Does sound like a warm blooded creature like Clemson said. Maybe a really big prehistoric Orca? Orcalodon perhaps? God I hope we don't have an Orcanado.
it all starts the same….false data: no? are the instruments broken?? no. they HAVE to be. they're not. uh - oh……...
Sorry guys, I had to open this one back up. Read the new caption! Plural, like several have been eaten. http://www.aol.com/article/2014/06/...ng-grid7|responsive|dl9|sec1_lnk2&pLid=486743
Yea seems like the most plausible. I would like to see the time it took for the tag reading the colder temp to read the warmer temp, and then see how long it took the temp to drop back down. They make it seem like the shark was swallowed whole and then the tag some how survived digestion and was passed through the "beast" in quick fashion. There is definitely some big scary creatures out there, but I dont think they are responsible for this. How do they even know the shark is dead? lol