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wtf? unidentified sea object (pg. 3)
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| St_Andrew |
| quote: | Originally posted by netw3rkd
cant wait to find out what it really is though. |
It was an octopus, saw it in a swedish newspaper. |
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| 69kAlikAdikA69 |
| quote: | Originally posted by St_Andrew
It was an octopus, saw it in a swedish newspaper. | what happened to it ??? this is scary as hell... the unknown. i've never seen the ocean and would like to.. although I doubt i'll get in thanks to stories and pictures from national geographic.. i remember an article on sand tunnels beneath the ocean floor and how there were multiple unknown species.... that just scares the hell outta me.:nervous: |
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| hangover |
| I bet in the end they'll find out it's a hoax made by some nerds, or a promotion for a pr0n site |
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| DJ Charlie |
ok...
I think its just a big load of white ...
a dead creature in water has 2 possible way to pass out...
either it goes up to surface.. like your little red fish...
either it goes down under the big sea ...
a 13 tons creature should have been gone way down !
what is it doing on the shore ?
AM I right ?? |
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| St_Andrew |
| In the swedish newspaper i reffered to earlier it stod that after that giant octopus died it always go up to the surface. It also said it was confirmed by an Italian expert that it was an octopus. |
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| hangover |
| quote: | Originally posted by DJ Charlie
ok...
I think its just a big load of white ...
a dead creature in water has 2 possible way to pass out...
either it goes up to surface.. like your little red fish...
either it goes down under the big sea ...
a 13 tons creature should have been gone way down !
what is it doing on the shore ?
AM I right ?? |
Weight is not the only factor. You can build a 13 ton blimp and fill it with helium or something and it will float, right? |
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| o0moonman0o |
| it will not float, it would take off into the skies :D |
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| Turbonium |
It's not the weight that matters guys, it's the density. If the average density of its tissue is less than that of water, it floats, even if the collective body as a whole has a great mass.
I'm guessing octopus tissue is such that it does not take in as much water as normal animal tissues due to osmosis, meaning it's tissue density remains less than that of water. |
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| Christopher B |
| wow, that's ing disgusting. |
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| dbb |
| Just do a google search on "giant octopuses" and you will get loads of information. It is a well-known phenomenon, and I believe Discovery Channel has sendt quite a number of documentaries about these creatures... |
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| igottaknow |
| looks like an omlete i made this morning :nervous: |
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| hangover |
| quote: | Originally posted by igottaknow
looks like an omlete i made this morning :nervous: |
looks like what happens a bit after I eat an omlete... |
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