A dead oarfish spotted along the Southern California coast marks the state's third sighting of the so-called "doomsday fish" ...
The doomsday fish got its name because it looks like a mythical sea creature, with a long, ribbon-shaped body that can grow ...
The doomsday fish got its name because it looks like a mythical sea creature, with a long, ribbon-shaped body that can grow ...
Considered to be the origin of the sea serpent tale, giant oarfish are a species yet to be largely researched by scientists.
A member of the Scripps Oceanography team spotted the dead fish outside of San Diego, California. The fish was estimated to ...
As for why people consider the oarfish to be a “doomsday” fish, NBC News explains that — as oarfish typically dwell in the ...
A rare deep-sea oarfish, also called a sea serpent, washed ashore near San Diego in Encinitas, and Scripps scientists are ...
For the second time this year, a deep-sea oarfish has washed ashore in San Diego County, giving scientists a rare chance to ...
A rare 9-foot oarfish dubbed the "doomsday fish," washed up in Encinitas, California, marking the third sighting of the species in the state this year. Oarfish, typically found deep in the ocean, are ...
Oarfish found at Encinitas’s Grandview Beach ... manager of the Scripps Oceanography Marine Vertebrate Collection, said.
The 9.5-foot oarfish was discovered on Nov. 6, marking the second such occurrence in San Diego County this year.
A rare deep-sea oarfish has washed up in California, the third to do so in a few months and only the 22nd since 1901.