Thousands of pieces of driftwood washed up on beaches, too - what killed those? WHAT?!
Which is to say, er, two corpses is hardly solid evidence that global warming is killing a species. Perhaps giant squids have been propagating mercilessly, and the two corpses are just the start of *millions* of giant squid corpses that will be washing up each day, three years from now. RavenBlack - Wed 17 Sep, 05:28:39 |
Yeah... how could it be a mythical monster if the corpse washes up on the coast? heh. Why would they call it that? Chloe - Wed 17 Sep, 20:18:00 |
Maybe it was just merely large, or enormous squid that washed up. Adam - Thu 18 Sep, 11:12:21 |
Nah, it's all one run-on sentence about mythical creatures "living":-
"The giant squid, the mythical monster that attacked Captain Nemo's Nautilus in Jules Verne's 'Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea', is the world's largest invertebrate and lives at depths of up to 2,000 metres (6,562 ft)." Kevan - Thu 18 Sep, 14:00:17 |
Yes, it just isn't good form. Chloe - Thu 18 Sep, 16:15:34 |
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