http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/stor ... 16,00.html
One photo, plus, click onto "Watch the video at the National Geographic website" at the end of the article at the url above. Weird, it has "elbows."
Sub glimpses 'alien-like' squid
From National Geographic
November 28, 2008 10:15am
INCREDIBLE footage of a giant deep-sea squid - which boasts giant tentacles and even elbows - has been captured by a remote-controlled submarine.
In a few seconds of jerky camerawork, the alien-like squid appears with its huge fins waving like elephant ears.
The footage was taken at 2km underwater in the Gulf of Mexico by an oil company submersible.
"The most peculiar structure is that of the arms," said deep-sea biologist Bruce Robison of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California.
Referring to the way the tentacles hang down from elbow-like kinks, Robison said: "Judging from that structure, we think the animal feeds by dragging its arms and the ends of its tentacles along the seafloor as it drifts slowly above it."
Watch the video at the National Geographic website
One photo, plus, click onto "Watch the video at the National Geographic website" at the end of the article at the url above. Weird, it has "elbows."
Sub glimpses 'alien-like' squid
From National Geographic
November 28, 2008 10:15am
INCREDIBLE footage of a giant deep-sea squid - which boasts giant tentacles and even elbows - has been captured by a remote-controlled submarine.
In a few seconds of jerky camerawork, the alien-like squid appears with its huge fins waving like elephant ears.
The footage was taken at 2km underwater in the Gulf of Mexico by an oil company submersible.
"The most peculiar structure is that of the arms," said deep-sea biologist Bruce Robison of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California.
Referring to the way the tentacles hang down from elbow-like kinks, Robison said: "Judging from that structure, we think the animal feeds by dragging its arms and the ends of its tentacles along the seafloor as it drifts slowly above it."
Watch the video at the National Geographic website
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