Updated
Updated · Forbes · Jun 28
Rediscovered Megalodon Vertebrae Back 24.3-Meter Size Estimate, Hinting at 96-Year Lifespan
Updated
Updated · Forbes · Jun 28

Rediscovered Megalodon Vertebrae Back 24.3-Meter Size Estimate, Hinting at 96-Year Lifespan

3 articles · Updated · Forbes · Jun 28

Summary

  • Danish Megalodon vertebrae lost since the 1980s have been rediscovered, letting researchers reexamine some of the largest shark vertebrae ever found from a specimen unearthed in the late 1970s.
  • 9-inch vertebrae from the 10.8-million-year-old fossils support a 2025 estimate that the animal reached about 24.3 meters, the largest scientifically defensible size so far, though researchers say a complete skeleton is still missing.
  • Micro-CT scans found at least 64 growth bands, indicating the shark was at least 64 years old; a growth model suggests it may have lived as long as 96 years.
  • Basking shark scales and gill structures preserved with the vertebrae may be stomach contents, potentially the first direct prey evidence tied to Megalodon and a sign it fed on large marine animals.
  • Because shark skeletons are mostly cartilage and rarely fossilize, the Danish specimen remains a rare anchor for debates over Megalodon's maximum size, growth and feeding ecology.

Insights

A rediscovered fossil suggests an 80-foot Megalodon. How does this lost specimen rewrite the story of the ocean's greatest predator?
For the first time, a Megalodon's last meal has been found. What does this discovery prove about its hunting habits?