Talk:Pacific sleeper shark

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Several references around the web say that the Sleeper Shark (also known as the Greenland Shark) is arctic, not antarctic. The species describe here sounds different.



And the "scientists are unsure" thing is just nonsense. Sharks are much thicker than giant squid, which are long, but narrow.

[edit] Pacific sleeper shark

was a Pacific sleeper shark deemed the largest shark ever filmed?

  • I'm not sure I understand what you mean... The two largest species of shark (and fish in general) are the Whale shark and the Basking shark, and I believe both have been filmed. --KFP 14:35, 21 July 2005 (UTC)

Maybe the documentary I watched ment the largest toothed shark ever filmed.


I have seen the video footage of this shark it is much, much bigger than any whale shark could ever be. so big that its whole body could not be filmed.

Huh? Bigger than a whale shark? Better go read some Web sites where KNOWN shark species lengths and weights and other vital measurements are compared.68.13.191.153 23:56, 4 December 2006 (UTC)

"300 pups in a litter" Unable to find info to verify that number. 300 is a LOT of little sharklets. Verification would be incredibly groovy.68.13.191.153 23:56, 4 December 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Sleeping Shark?

According to a couple of articles that i've found today, here and here reference is made to a Sleeping Shark, the largest shark in the world, that is a mystery as recently as 2003. Anyone know anythign really about this?--The Sporadic Update 21:14, 21 December 2006 (UTC)

They refer to the pacific sleeping shark. Both those sites mentioned are incredibly inaccurate; one of them a famous russian tabloid; the other a creationist propaganda site. The tabloid has for some reason came to confuse "23-26 feet" with 23-26 metre (70-85 feet or so). Anyway, they both deal with the filming of a very large pacific sleeper shark by the coast of Japan in the early 1990's. It can be found here on YouTube. Experts said it was roughly 23 feet long. Luka 21:34, 29 January 2007 (UTC)