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Giant octopuses were the ocean's apex predators

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 · 21h
60-foot octopus prowled seas as apex predator during age of dinosaurs, fossilized jaws show
The top predator prowling the seas during the age of the dinosaurs 100 million years ago may have been the octopus.

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 · 1d · on MSN
Giant, 60-foot octopuses were apex predators 100 million years ago, fossil discovery shows
The Brighterside of News on MSN · 13h
Giant octopuses were the ocean's apex predators 100 million years ago
 · 1d
Meet the 19-metre octopus that prowled the ancient seas
Giant octopuses may have ruled the ancient oceans 100 million years ago, when dinosaurs roamed the land, according to new research.

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 · 15h
Terrifying 62ft octopus likened to mythical kraken that swallowed ships confirmed to have roamed seas in dinosaur era
 · 21h
Giant ‘Kraken’ Octopus Ruled the Ocean 100 Million Years Ago, Study Suggests
 · 1d
Jaw fossils suggest a 60-foot octopus was the ‘kraken’ of the Cretaceous
They found that N. haggarti stretched to about 60 feet long, longer than a city bus and surpassing the largest known giant squid by nearly 20 feet.

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 · 1d
Monstrous octopus terrorized seas off B.C. in Age of Dinosaurs, study suggests
 · 1d
Giant, Kraken-Like Octopuses Once Stalked Their Prey in Cretaceous Seas
16h

Meet the 19-meter Cretaceous kraken that swam with mosasaurs

Some 80 million years ago, the late Cretaceous oceans were patrolled by 17-meter mosasaurs, long-necked plesiosaurs, and massive, predatory sharks. For decades, the paleontological consensus was that this was the age of vertebrates; anything without a backbone was lunch.
New Scientist on MSN
1d

Largest-ever octopus was great white shark of invertebrate predators

During the Cretaceous, 19-metre-long predatory octopuses swam the seas, and evidence from their fossilised remains suggest they may have been highly intelligent hunters
1don MSN

Giant octopuses may have ruled the oceans 100 million years ago

Today's octopuses are intelligent, remarkably flexible animals that lurk in reefs, hide in crevices, or drift through the deep sea. But new research suggests that their earliest relatives may have played a far more predatory role in ocean ecosystems.
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