I, for one, welcome our new Megalodon overlords
The (Carcharodon) Megalodon is thought to have looked something like a
Great White Shark, only a bit more stocky and overall bigger… much
bigger, with an average adult Megalodon estimated to have weighed around
70-100 tons (about 30 times that of a Great White Shark which full
grown tend to be about 2.5-3 tons). The Megalodon is estimated to have
been around 15-24 meters long (50-78 ft., compared to a typical adult
Great White Shark which is only 6m or 20 ft long). It is also estimated
that the bite force the Megalodon’s jaws could generate was somewhere
in the vicinity of 108,514 N – 182,201 N (11-18 tons of force). For
reference, this is about 6-10 times the biting power of a Great White
Shark and 18-30 times that of a Lion.
Not only were its jaws exceptionally powerful, but the Megalodon had
teeth as large as 18 cm long (7 inches- in fact, “Megalodon” literally
means “giant tooth”), which are today the most common remnants of the
Megalodon found. These teeth didn’t just have powerful jaws helping
them to slice through prey, but they also are serrated and deeply
planted in the jaw, so as not to break loose or chip when biting even
through thick bones of another creature.
Megalodon vs. Great White Shark Teeth
This giant of the sea seems to have traveled far and wide, with their
teeth found throughout the globe. Based on fossil evidence
(particularly chewed remains of certain things), its favorite food is
thought to have been marine mammals, but it also would eat other things.
Among the known things it preferred to eat were dolphins, squids,
whales (including very large ones like Sperm Whales), sea lions,
porpoises, giant sea turtles, and the like.
So if this was such a big and powerful creature, seemingly the king
of the ocean, what happened to the Megalodon? There are a variety of
theories, but mainly it’s thought its extinction came about due
primarily to climate change. The Megalodon preferred warmer waters and
thanks to global cooling of the Earth’s oceans starting around 15-17
million years ago and culminating into the last Ice Age, the Megalodon
died out around the end of the Pliocene era (about 2.5 million years
ago). At this point, the Earth’s global temperature had cooled to just
about 2-3° C (3.6-5.4° F) higher than today.
It’s thought this may have simultaneously resulted in a lessening of
available warm water breeding sites and a decline in available food
supply due to many of the whales it fed on either dying out or moving
towards more polar regions where the water was now too cold for the
Megalodon. Without an abundance of reasonable sized prey to feed on, the
extremely large and voracious Megalodon couldn’t last long. It’s
thought that as food became scarce, the Megalodons even began resorting
to cannibalism, and young Megalodons were particularly susceptible,
further accelerating their progress towards extinction, which ultimately
happened around 1.6-2 million years ago.