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More precisely, the specimen is known as Bathyphysa conifera. Jones said, "This unusual creature has sparked a huge reaction on the internet with over a quarter of a million people watching the ...
A rarely seen Bathyphysa conifera, commonly known as flying spaghetti monster was documented on Dive 692 while the research team was surveying an unnamed and unexplored seamount (internally ...
In the video, the spaghetti monster (Bathyphysa conifera) is filmed up close, revealing the creature's pink-tipped, sausage-like arms and other filamentous appendages.
The deadly Portuguese man o' war is Bathyphysa conifera's most famous cousin. Follow Daily Mirror: Facebook X (Twitter) TikTok Instagram Snapchat ...
Philip Pugh, one of Jones’s colleagues, pinned it down precisely. After noticing that the tentacles do not have side branches, he deduced that it was a specimen of Bathyphysa conifera.
A rarely seen Bathyphysa conifera, commonly known as flying spaghetti monster was documented on Dive 692 while the research team was surveying an unnamed and unexplored seamount (internally ...
Researchers spotted what they believe to be the species Bathyphysa conifera off of the coast of Angola. The BP workers who spotted it nicknamed it the Flying Spaghetti Monster.
During the 28-day expedition, researchers also spotted two Bathyphysa siphonophores, rare deep-sea marine creatures also known as "flying spaghetti monsters" because of their long, wavy tendrils.
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