According to the organization, the fish is a so-called “black seadevil” known by its scientific name Melanocetus johnsonii. They typically swim between 650 and 6,500 feet below the ocean’s surface.
The scary-looking fish is usually to be found more than a mile below the surface, where little to no light penetrates.
A deep sea creature known for living hundreds of meters below the water's surface in the darkness of the deep ocean was photographed in broad daylight last week — in what researchers are saying may be ...
After languishing for decades, the Baltic countries have dusted off their fusty image as a second-rate travel destination and ...
In just three months, three incidents of damage to Baltic Sea underwater cables have taken place. While accidential cable ...
In the face of seabeds becoming valuable real estate and corroding bombs polluting the oceans, teams are turning to ...
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Hosted on MSNBaltic Sea's deadly legacy: A looming ecological disasterThe topic of deadly remnants from past conflicts regularly resurfaces in the media and beyond. Unfortunately, this issue ...
Renewable fuel producer Neste said that it accepts responsibility for the pollution and will provide compensation for any ...
NATO is deploying eyes in the sky and on the Baltic Sea to protect cables and ...
The Swedish coast guard seized a Bulgarian vessel, Vezhen, after a fibre-optic cable connecting Sweden and Latvia was damaged under the Baltic Sea. Latvia sent a warship to investigate ...
STOCKHOLM: Swedish authorities boarded a Maltese-flagged ship seized in connection with the latest breach of cables running along the bottom of the Baltic Sea to begin an investigation into the ...
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