“We could see these tentacles moving,” she added in a March 20 interview with The New York Times.
A shortfin mako shark, the fastest-swimming shark in the world, was caught on camera with an octopus catching a ride on its back off the coast of New Zealand.
With documented swimming speeds of up to 46 miles per hour, mako sharks represent the world’s fastest elasmobranch species.
Researchers at University of Auckland documented the real-life sharktopus during a December 2023 expedition in the Hauraki ...
A real-life "Sharktopus" situation unfolded in the Hauraki Gulf near Kawau Island in New Zealand, and scientists couldn't ...
Forget your sk8er bois and surfers, there is officially a new coolest way to get around and it’s riding on the back of a ...
A group of marine biologists who have spent years researching sharks and their behaviour were completely dumbfounded by a rare sight off the coast of New Zealand.
"We launched the drone, put the GoPro in the water, and saw something unforgettable: an octopus perched atop the shark’s head, clinging on with its tentacles," Rochelle Constantine, a professor in the ...
After over a decade in business, Fuego at Troika Sky Dining is taking the wraps off an updated menu. Here are our thoughts on its offerings.
From the buzzy cocktail lounge on the ground floor of a glassy new skyscraper, diners ascend a staircase, “like Wagnerian ...
Peking Tokyo, Wabi Sabi and Kawa Ni are among the top Japanese restaurants for 2025, according to Connecticut Magazine ...