A paleontologist insists that a massive octopus-like creature once terrorized the ocean and turned the bones of its prey into a self portrait
Here's what you should know:
Where did McMenamin come up with this story?
In Nevada. Specifically, at Nevada's Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park. McMenamin claims that the park actually housed the kraken's exotic lair. The proof, he says, is that the fossilized ichthyosaur bones there look a lot like artfully arranged "self-portraits" of the kraken itself.
Umm... really?
Yep. It's true that the fossils have long puzzled scientists. The remains of nine ichthyosaurs — each one "snaggletoothed" and roughly the size of a school bus — are indeed arranged in a "mysterious" pattern, according to Science Daily. Scientists thought it strange that so many ichthyosaur carcasses were in one place. And when McMenamin visited the site himself, "it became very clear that something very odd was going on," he says.
But a giant killer octopus?
Well, the bones seemed "purposefully arranged," says Clint Demeritt at the International Business Times, and "modern octopuses are known to leave piles of bones and shells in their dens." This led McMenamin to theorize that a giant octopus like the kraken captured and killed the ichthyosaurs. A video of an octopus secretly killing sharks at a Seattle aquarium recently gave the octopus "a reputation as a killer," notes Demeritt. And McMenamin says that broken ribs and twisted necks on the fossils suggest a "cephalopod in the Triassic was doing the same thing."
And the self portrait...?
Well, says Science Daily, the remains of the ichthyosaur vertebrae do resemble the "sucker discs" on an octopus' tentacle. "In other words, the vertebral disc 'pavement'… may represent the earliest known self-portrait." Give me a break, says Sarah Simpson at Discovery. "There is no direct evidence of such a monster's existence," let alone any indications of intelligence that would allow it to create its own "self-portrait."
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