{"title":"Megalodon","authors":"Edward Guimont","doi":"10.5204/mcj.2793","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In 1999, the TV movie Shark Attack depicted an attack by mutant great white sharks on the population of Cape Town. By the time the third entry in the series, Shark Attack 3, aired in 2002, mutant great whites had lost their lustre and were replaced as antagonists with the megalodon: a giant shark originating not in any laboratory, but history, having lived from approximately 23 to 3.6 million years ago. The megalodon was resurrected again in May 2021 through a trifecta of events. A video of a basking shark encounter in the Atlantic went viral on the social media platform TikTok, due to users misidentifying it as a megalodon caught on tape. At the same time a boy received publicity for finding a megalodon tooth on a beach in South Carolina on his fifth birthday (Scott). And finally, the video game Stranded Deep, in which a megalodon is featured as a major enemy, was released as one of the monthly free games on the PlayStation Plus gaming service.\nThese examples form part of a larger trend of alleged megalodon sightings in recent years, emerging as a component of the modern resurgence of cryptozoology. In the words of Bernard Heuvelmans, the Belgian zoologist who both popularised the term and was a leading figure of the field, cryptozoology is the “science of hidden animals”, which he further explained were\n\nmore generally referred to as ‘unknowns’, even though they are typically known to local populations—at least sufficiently so that we often indirectly know of their existence, and certain aspects of their appearance and behaviour. It would be better to call them animals ‘undescribed by science,’ at least according to prescribed zoological rules. (1-2)\n\nIn other words, a large aspect of cryptozoology as a field is taking the legendary creatures of non-Western mythology and finding materialist explanations for them compatible with Western biology. In many ways, this is a relic of the era of European imperialism, when many creatures of Africa and the Americas were “hidden animals” to European eyes (Dendle 200-01; Flores 557; Guimont). A major example of this is Bigfoot beliefs, a large subset of which took Native American legends about hairy wild men and attempted to prove that they were actually sightings of relict Gigantopithecus. These “hidden animals”—Bigfoot, Nessie, the chupacabra, the glawackus—are referred to as ‘cryptids’ by cryptozoologists (Regal 22, 81-104).\nAlmost unique in cryptozoology, the megalodon is a cryptid based entirely on Western scientific development, and even the notion that it survives comes from standard scientific analysis (albeit analysis which was later superseded). Much like living mammoths and Bigfoot, what might be called the ‘megalodon as cryptid hypothesis’ serves to reinforce a fairy tale of its own. It reflects the desire to believe that there are still areas of the Earth untouched enough by human destruction to sustain massive animal life (Dendle 199-200). Indeed, megalodon’s continued existence would help absolve humanity for the oceanic aspect of the Sixth Extinction, by its role as an alternative apex predator; cryptozoologist Michael Goss even proposed that whales and giant squids are rare not from human causes, but precisely because megalodons are feeding on them (40). Horror scholar Michael Fuchs has pointed out that shark media, particularly the 1975 film Jaws and its 2006 video game adaptation Jaws Unleashed, are imbued with eco-politics (Fuchs 172-83). These connections, as well as the modern megalodon’s surge in popularity, make it notable that none of Syfy’s climate change-focused Sharknado films featured a megalodon.\nDespite the lack of a Megalodonado, the popular appeal of the megalodon serves as an important case study. Given its scientific origin and dynamic relationship with popular culture, I argue that the ‘megalodon as cryptid hypothesis’ illustrates how the boundaries between ‘hard’ science and mythology, fiction and reality, as well as ‘monster’ and ‘animal’, are not as firm as advocates of the Western science tradition might believe. As this essay highlights, science can be a mythology of its own, and monsters can serve as its gods of the gaps—or, in the case of megalodon, the god of the depths.\nMegalodon Fossils: A Short History\nAncient peoples of various cultures likely viewed fossilised teeth of megalodons in the area of modern-day Syria (Mayor, First Fossil Hunters 257). Over the past 2500 years, Native American cultures in North America used megalodon teeth both as curios and cutting tools, due to their large size and serrated edges. A substantial trade in megalodon teeth fossils existed between the cultures inhabiting the areas of the Chesapeake Bay and Ohio River Valley (Lowery et al. 93-108). A 1961 study found megalodon teeth present as offerings in pre-Columbian temples across Central America, including in the Mayan city of Palenque in Mexico and Sitio Conte in Panama (de Borhegyi 273-96). But these cases led to no mythologies incorporating megalodons, in contrast to examples such as the Unktehi, a Sioux water monster of myth likely inspired by a combination of mammoth and mosasaur fossils (Mayor, First Americans 221-38). \nIn early modern Europe, megalodon teeth were initially referred to as ‘tongue stones’, due to their similarity in size and shape to human tongues—just one of many ways modern cryptozoology comes from European religious and mystical thought (Dendle 190-216). In 1605, English scholar Richard Verstegan published his book A Restitution of Decayed Intelligence in Antiquities, which included an engraving of a tongue stone, making megalodon teeth potentially the subject of the first known illustration of any fossil (Davidson 333). In Malta, from the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries, megalodon teeth, known as ‘St. Paul’s tongue’, were used as charms to ward off the evil eye, dipped into drinks suspected of being poisoned, and even ground into powder and consumed as medicine (Zammit-Maempel, “Evil Eye” plate III; Zammit-Maempel, “Handbills” 220; Freller 31-32).\nWhile megalodon teeth were valued in and of themselves, they were not incorporated into myths, or led to a belief in megalodons still being extant. Indeed, save for their size, megalodon teeth were hard to distinguish from those of living sharks, like great whites. Instead, both the identification of megalodons as a species, and the idea that they might still be alive, were notions which originated from extrapolations of the results of nineteenth and twentieth century European scientific studies. In particular, the major culprit was the famous British 1872-76 HMS Challenger expedition, which led to the establishment of oceanography as a branch of science.\nIn 1873, Challenger recovered fossilised megalodon teeth from the South Pacific, the first recovered in the open ocean (Shuker 48; Goss 35; Roesch). In 1959, the zoologist Wladimir Tschernezky of Queen Mary College analysed the teeth recovered by the Challenger and argued (erroneously, as later seen) that the accumulation of manganese dioxide on its surface indicated that one had to have been deposited within the last 11,000 years, while another was given an age of 24,000 years (1331-32). However, these views have more recently been debunked, with megalodon extinction occurring over two million years ago at the absolute latest (Pimiento and Clements 1-5; Coleman and Huyghe 138; Roesch).\nTschernezky’s 1959 claim that megalodons still existed as of 9000 BCE was followed by the 1963 book Sharks and Rays of Australian Seas, a posthumous publication by ichthyologist David George Stead. Stead recounted a story told to him in 1918 by fishermen in Port Stephens, New South Wales, of an encounter with a fully white shark in the 115-300 foot range, which Stead argued was a living megalodon. That this account came from Stead was notable as he held a PhD in biology, had founded the Wildlife Preservation Society of Australia, and had debunked an earlier supposed sea monster sighting in Sydney Harbor in 1907 (45-46). The Stead account formed the backbone of cryptozoological claims for the continued existence of the megalodon, and after the book’s publication, multiple reports of giant shark sightings in the Pacific from the 1920s and 1930s were retroactively associated with relict megalodons (Shuker 43, 49; Coleman and Huyghe 139-40; Goss 40-41; Roesch).\nA Monster of Science and Culture\nAs I have outlined above, the ‘megalodon as cryptid hypothesis’ had as its origin story not in Native American or African myth, but Western science: the Challenger Expedition, a London zoologist, and an Australian ichthyologist. Nor was the idea of a living megalodon necessarily outlandish; in the decades after the Challenger Expedition, a number of supposedly extinct fish species had been discovered to be anything but. In the late 1800s, the goblin shark and frilled shark, both considered ‘living fossils’, had been found in the Pacific (Goss 34-35). In 1938, the coelacanth, also believed by Western naturalists to have been extinct for millions of years, was rediscovered (at least by Europeans) in South Africa, samples having occasionally been caught by local fishermen for centuries. The coelacanth in particular helped give scientific legitimacy to the idea, prevalent for decades by that point, that living dinosaurs—associated with a legendary creature called the mokele-mbembe—might still exist in the heart of Central Africa (Guimont). In 1976, a US Navy ship off Hawaii recovered a megamouth shark, a deep-water species completely unknown prior. All of these oceanic discoveries gave credence to the idea that the megalodon might also still survive (Coleman and Clark 66-68, 156-57; Shuker 41; Goss 35; Roesch). Indeed, Goss has noted that prior to 1938, respectable ichthyologists were more likely to believe in the continued existence of the megalodon than the coelacanth (39-40).\nOf course, the major reason why speculation over megalodon survival had suc","PeriodicalId":399256,"journal":{"name":"M/C Journal","volume":"5 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"M/C Journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5204/mcj.2793","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
摘要
1999年,电视电影《鲨鱼袭击》描述了变种大白鲨对开普敦居民的袭击。到该系列的第三部《鲨鱼攻击3》(Shark Attack 3)于2002年播出时,变异的大白鲨已经失去了光彩,取而代之的是巨齿鲨(megalodon):一种不是来自任何实验室的巨型鲨鱼,而是历史上的,生活在大约2300万到360万年前。2021年5月,巨齿鲨通过三场活动再次复活。一段在大西洋遭遇姥鲨的视频在社交媒体平台TikTok上疯传,因为用户误以为这是视频中捕捉到的巨齿鲨。与此同时,一个男孩在5岁生日时在南卡罗莱纳的海滩上发现了一颗巨齿鲨的牙齿,受到了公众的关注(斯科特)。最后,视频游戏《搁浅深渊》(搁浅深渊)作为PlayStation Plus游戏服务的月度免费游戏之一发布。在游戏中,巨齿鲨是一个主要敌人。这些例子构成了近年来所谓的巨齿鲨目击的更大趋势的一部分,成为现代神秘动物学复兴的一个组成部分。用比利时动物学家Bernard Heuvelmans的话来说,隐动物学是“研究隐藏动物的科学”,他进一步解释说,隐动物学通常被称为“未知动物”,尽管它们通常为当地人群所知——至少足够让我们经常间接知道它们的存在,以及它们外表和行为的某些方面。至少根据规定的动物学规则,称它们为“未被科学描述的”动物会更好一些。(1-2)换句话说,作为一个领域,神秘动物学的一个很大方面是采用非西方神话中的传说生物,并为它们寻找与西方生物学相容的唯物主义解释。在许多方面,这是欧洲帝国主义时代的遗迹,当时非洲和美洲的许多生物在欧洲人眼中是“隐藏的动物”(Dendle 200-01;弗洛雷斯557;Guimont)。这方面的一个主要例子就是大脚怪信仰,其中很大一部分信仰采用了美洲原住民关于多毛野人的传说,并试图证明他们实际上看到了巨猿的遗存。这些“隐藏的动物”——大脚怪、尼斯湖水怪、卓柏卡布拉、格拉瓦克斯——被神秘动物学家称为“神秘动物”(Regal 22,81 -104)。巨齿鲨在神秘动物学中几乎是独一无二的,它是一种完全基于西方科学发展的神秘生物,甚至它存活的概念也来自标准的科学分析(尽管后来的分析被取代了)。就像现存的猛犸象和大脚怪一样,所谓的“巨齿鲨神秘假说”也可以用来强化它自己的童话故事。它反映了一种愿望,即相信地球上仍有一些地区未受人类破坏,足以维持大量动物的生命(Dendle 199-200)。事实上,巨齿鲨的继续存在将有助于人类在第六次大灭绝中免除海洋方面的责任,因为它作为另一种顶级掠食者的角色;神秘动物学家Michael Goss甚至提出,鲸鱼和巨型乌贼之所以罕见,不是因为人类的原因,而是因为巨齿鲨以它们为食。恐怖学者Michael Fuchs指出,关于鲨鱼的媒体,尤其是1975年的电影《大白鲨》和2006年改编的视频游戏《大白鲨释放》,都充斥着生态政治(Fuchs 172-83)。这些联系,以及现代巨齿鲨的人气飙升,让我们注意到,Syfy以气候变化为主题的鲨鱼电影都没有出现巨齿鲨。尽管没有巨齿鲨,但巨齿鲨的普遍吸引力是一个重要的研究案例。考虑到它的科学起源和与流行文化的动态关系,我认为“巨齿鲨作为神秘的假说”说明了“硬”科学与神话、小说与现实、“怪物”与“动物”之间的界限,并不像西方科学传统的拥护者可能认为的那样牢固。正如这篇文章所强调的,科学可以是它自己的神话,怪物可以作为它的缝隙之神——或者,在巨齿鲨的例子中,是深渊之神。巨齿鲨化石:一段简短的历史不同文化的古代人可能在现代叙利亚地区看到了巨齿鲨的牙齿化石(Mayor, First Fossil Hunters 257)。在过去的2500年里,由于巨齿鲨的巨大尺寸和锯齿状边缘,北美的美洲原住民文化将其作为古玩和切割工具。居住在切萨皮克湾和俄亥俄河谷地区的文化之间存在着大量的巨齿鲨牙齿化石贸易(Lowery et al. 93-108)。1961年的一项研究发现,在中美洲的前哥伦布时代的寺庙中,包括墨西哥的玛雅城市帕伦克和巴拿马的西蒂奥孔蒂(de Borhegyi 273-96),都有巨齿鲨的牙齿作为供品。 1999年,电视电影《鲨鱼袭击》描述了变种大白鲨对开普敦居民的袭击。到该系列的第三部《鲨鱼攻击3》(Shark Attack 3)于2002年播出时,变异的大白鲨已经失去了光彩,取而代之的是巨齿鲨(megalodon):一种不是来自任何实验室的巨型鲨鱼,而是历史上的,生活在大约2300万到360万年前。2021年5月,巨齿鲨通过三场活动再次复活。一段在大西洋遭遇姥鲨的视频在社交媒体平台TikTok上疯传,因为用户误以为这是视频中捕捉到的巨齿鲨。与此同时,一个男孩在5岁生日时在南卡罗莱纳的海滩上发现了一颗巨齿鲨的牙齿,受到了公众的关注(斯科特)。最后,视频游戏《搁浅深渊》(搁浅深渊)作为PlayStation Plus游戏服务的月度免费游戏之一发布。在游戏中,巨齿鲨是一个主要敌人。这些例子构成了近年来所谓的巨齿鲨目击的更大趋势的一部分,成为现代神秘动物学复兴的一个组成部分。用比利时动物学家Bernard Heuvelmans的话来说,隐动物学是“研究隐藏动物的科学”,他进一步解释说,隐动物学通常被称为“未知动物”,尽管它们通常为当地人群所知——至少足够让我们经常间接知道它们的存在,以及它们外表和行为的某些方面。至少根据规定的动物学规则,称它们为“未被科学描述的”动物会更好一些。(1-2)换句话说,作为一个领域,神秘动物学的一个很大方面是采用非西方神话中的传说生物,并为它们寻找与西方生物学相容的唯物主义解释。在许多方面,这是欧洲帝国主义时代的遗迹,当时非洲和美洲的许多生物在欧洲人眼中是“隐藏的动物”(Dendle 200-01;弗洛雷斯557;Guimont)。这方面的一个主要例子就是大脚怪信仰,其中很大一部分信仰采用了美洲原住民关于多毛野人的传说,并试图证明他们实际上看到了巨猿的遗存。这些“隐藏的动物”——大脚怪、尼斯湖水怪、卓柏卡布拉、格拉瓦克斯——被神秘动物学家称为“神秘动物”(Regal 22,81 -104)。巨齿鲨在神秘动物学中几乎是独一无二的,它是一种完全基于西方科学发展的神秘生物,甚至它存活的概念也来自标准的科学分析(尽管后来的分析被取代了)。就像现存的猛犸象和大脚怪一样,所谓的“巨齿鲨神秘假说”也可以用来强化它自己的童话故事。它反映了一种愿望,即相信地球上仍有一些地区未受人类破坏,足以维持大量动物的生命(Dendle 199-200)。事实上,巨齿鲨的继续存在将有助于人类在第六次大灭绝中免除海洋方面的责任,因为它作为另一种顶级掠食者的角色;神秘动物学家Michael Goss甚至提出,鲸鱼和巨型乌贼之所以罕见,不是因为人类的原因,而是因为巨齿鲨以它们为食。恐怖学者Michael Fuchs指出,关于鲨鱼的媒体,尤其是1975年的电影《大白鲨》和2006年改编的视频游戏《大白鲨释放》,都充斥着生态政治(Fuchs 172-83)。这些联系,以及现代巨齿鲨的人气飙升,让我们注意到,Syfy以气候变化为主题的鲨鱼电影都没有出现巨齿鲨。尽管没有巨齿鲨,但巨齿鲨的普遍吸引力是一个重要的研究案例。考虑到它的科学起源和与流行文化的动态关系,我认为“巨齿鲨作为神秘的假说”说明了“硬”科学与神话、小说与现实、“怪物”与“动物”之间的界限,并不像西方科学传统的拥护者可能认为的那样牢固。正如这篇文章所强调的,科学可以是它自己的神话,怪物可以作为它的缝隙之神——或者,在巨齿鲨的例子中,是深渊之神。巨齿鲨化石:一段简短的历史不同文化的古代人可能在现代叙利亚地区看到了巨齿鲨的牙齿化石(Mayor, First Fossil Hunters 257)。在过去的2500年里,由于巨齿鲨的巨大尺寸和锯齿状边缘,北美的美洲原住民文化将其作为古玩和切割工具。居住在切萨皮克湾和俄亥俄河谷地区的文化之间存在着大量的巨齿鲨牙齿化石贸易(Lowery et al. 93-108)。1961年的一项研究发现,在中美洲的前哥伦布时代的寺庙中,包括墨西哥的玛雅城市帕伦克和巴拿马的西蒂奥孔蒂(de Borhegyi 273-96),都有巨齿鲨的牙齿作为供品。 但这些案例并没有导致包含巨齿鲨的神话,与之形成对比的是像Unktehi这样的例子,Unktehi是苏族的一种水怪,很可能是受到猛犸象和摩萨龙化石的结合的启发(Mayor, First Americans 221-38)。在现代早期的欧洲,巨齿鲨的牙齿最初被称为“舌石”,因为它们的大小和形状与人类的舌头相似——这只是现代神秘动物学来自欧洲宗教和神秘思想的众多方式之一(Dendle 190-216)。1605年,英国学者理查德·韦斯特根出版了他的著作《古物中腐朽智力的恢复》,书中有一块舌石的雕刻,这使得巨齿鲨牙齿有可能成为已知的第一个化石插图的主题(戴维森333)。在马耳他,从16世纪到18世纪,巨齿鲨的牙齿,被称为“St。“保罗的舌头”,被用作抵御邪恶之眼的护身符,浸在怀疑有毒的饮料中,甚至磨成粉末作为药物食用(zammitt - maempel,“邪恶之眼”盘III;zammitt - maempel, " Handbills " 220;31 - 32) Freller。虽然巨齿鲨的牙齿本身就很有价值,但它们并没有被纳入神话,也没有让人相信巨齿鲨仍然存在。事实上,除了它们的体型之外,巨齿鲨的牙齿很难与大白鲨等现存鲨鱼的牙齿区分开来。相反,巨齿鲨作为一个物种的识别,以及它们可能仍然活着的想法,都是源自19世纪和20世纪欧洲科学研究结果的推断。特别是1872年至1876年英国著名的“挑战者号”海军考察队,这次考察队使海洋学成为一门科学。1873年,挑战者号在南太平洋发现了巨齿鲨的牙齿化石,这是第一个在公海发现的化石(Shuker 48;戈斯35;罗斯切)。1959年,玛丽女王学院的动物学家vladimir Tschernezky分析了挑战者号发现的牙齿,并认为(后来发现是错误的),其表面二氧化锰的积累表明,其中一颗牙齿是在过去11000年里沉积的,而另一颗牙齿的年龄是24000年(1331- 1332年)。然而,这些观点最近被揭穿了,巨齿鲨的灭绝发生在200多万年前的最晚时期(Pimiento和Clements 1-5;Coleman and Huyghe 138;罗斯切)。切尔内兹基1959年声称,巨齿鲨在公元前9000年仍然存在,随后1963年,鱼类学家大卫·乔治·斯特德(David George Stead)在他死后出版了《澳大利亚海洋的鲨鱼和射线》(Sharks and Rays of Australian Seas)一书。斯特德讲述了1918年新南威尔士州斯蒂芬斯港的渔民告诉他的一个故事,他们在115-300英尺的范围内遇到了一条全白的鲨鱼,斯特德认为这是一条活着的巨齿鲨。这个说法来自斯特德,这一点值得注意,因为他拥有生物学博士学位,成立了澳大利亚野生动物保护协会,并揭穿了1907年在悉尼港看到海怪的说法(45-46)。斯特德的叙述构成了巨齿鲨继续存在的神秘动物学主张的支柱,在这本书出版后,20世纪20年代和30年代在太平洋看到巨型鲨鱼的多份报告都追溯到与遗存的巨齿鲨有关(Shuker 43,49;科尔曼和Huyghe 139-40;戈斯40-41;罗斯切)。科学和文化的怪物正如我在上面概述的那样,“巨齿鲨是神秘生物的假说”的起源故事不是来自美洲原住民或非洲神话,而是西方科学:挑战者探险队,伦敦动物学家和澳大利亚鱼类学家。活的巨齿鲨的想法也不一定是古怪的;在“挑战者号”探险之后的几十年里,人们发现了许多被认为已经灭绝的鱼类。19世纪后期,在太平洋发现了被认为是“活化石”的地精鲨和褶边鲨(Goss 34-35)。1938年,同样被西方博物学家认为已经灭绝数百万年的腔棘鱼在南非被重新发现(至少被欧洲人发现),几个世纪以来偶尔被当地渔民捕获的样本。特别是腔棘鱼,为当时流行了几十年的观点提供了科学依据,即活着的恐龙——与传说中的一种叫做mokele-mbembe的生物有关——可能仍然存在于中非(Guimont)的心脏地带。1976年,一艘美国海军船只在夏威夷附近发现了一条巨嘴鲨,这是一种以前完全不为人知的深水物种。所有这些海洋上的发现都证实了巨齿鲨可能仍然存活的观点(Coleman and Clark 66- 68,156 -57;Shuker 41;戈斯35;罗斯切)。事实上,高斯注意到,在1938年之前,受人尊敬的鱼类学家更倾向于相信巨齿鲨的继续存在,而不是腔棘鱼(39-40)。 但这些案例并没有导致包含巨齿鲨的神话,与之形成对比的是像Unktehi这样的例子,Unktehi是苏族的一种水怪,很可能是受到猛犸象和摩萨龙化石的结合的启发(Mayor, First Americans 221-38)。在现代早期的欧洲,巨齿鲨的牙齿最初被称为“舌石”,因为它们的大小和形状与人类的舌头相似——这只是现代神秘动物学来自欧洲宗教和神秘思想的众多方式之一(Dendle 190-216)。1605年,英国学者理查德·韦斯特根出版了他的著作《古物中腐朽智力的恢复》,书中有一块舌石的雕刻,这使得巨齿鲨牙齿有可能成为已知的第一个化石插图的主题(戴维森333)。在马耳他,从16世纪到18世纪,巨齿鲨的牙齿,被称为“St。“保罗的舌头”,被用作抵御邪恶之眼的护身符,浸在怀疑有毒的饮料中,甚至磨成粉末作为药物食用(zammitt - maempel,“邪恶之眼”盘III;zammitt - maempel, " Handbills " 220;31 - 32) Freller。虽然巨齿鲨的牙齿本身就很有价值,但它们并没有被纳入神话,也没有让人相信巨齿鲨仍然存在。事实上,除了它们的体型之外,巨齿鲨的牙齿很难与大白鲨等现存鲨鱼的牙齿区分开来。相反,巨齿鲨作为一个物种的识别,以及它们可能仍然活着的想法,都是源自19世纪和20世纪欧洲科学研究结果的推断。特别是1872年至1876年英国著名的“挑战者号”海军考察队,这次考察队使海洋学成为一门科学。1873年,挑战者号在南太平洋发现了巨齿鲨的牙齿化石,这是第一个在公海发现的化石(Shuker 48;戈斯35;罗斯切)。1959年,玛丽女王学院的动物学家vladimir Tschernezky分析了挑战者号发现的牙齿,并认为(后来发现是错误的),其表面二氧化锰的积累表明,其中一颗牙齿是在过去11000年里沉积的,而另一颗牙齿的年龄是24000年(1331- 1332年)。然而,这些观点最近被揭穿了,巨齿鲨的灭绝发生在200多万年前的最晚时期(Pimiento和Clements 1-5;Coleman and Huyghe 138;罗斯切)。切尔内兹基1959年声称,巨齿鲨在公元前9000年仍然存在,随后1963年,鱼类学家大卫·乔治·斯特德(David George Stead)在他死后出版了《澳大利亚海洋的鲨鱼和射线》(Sharks and Rays of Australian Seas)一书。斯特德讲述了1918年新南威尔士州斯蒂芬斯港的渔民告诉他的一个故事,他们在115-300英尺的范围内遇到了一条全白的鲨鱼,斯特德认为这是一条活着的巨齿鲨。这个说法来自斯特德,这一点值得注意,因为他拥有生物学博士学位,成立了澳大利亚野生动物保护协会,并揭穿了1907年在悉尼港看到海怪的说法(45-46)。斯特德的叙述构成了巨齿鲨继续存在的神秘动物学主张的支柱,在这本书出版后,20世纪20年代和30年代在太平洋看到巨型鲨鱼的多份报告都追溯到与遗存的巨齿鲨有关(Shuker 43,49;科尔曼和Huyghe 139-40;戈斯40-41;罗斯切)。科学和文化的怪物正如我在上面概述的那样,“巨齿鲨是神秘生物的假说”的起源故事不是来自美洲原住民或非洲神话,而是西方科学:挑战者探险队,伦敦动物学家和澳大利亚鱼类学家。活的巨齿鲨的想法也不一定是古怪的;在“挑战者号”探险之后的几十年里,人们发现了许多被认为已经灭绝的鱼类。19世纪后期,在太平洋发现了被认为是“活化石”的地精鲨和褶边鲨(Goss 34-35)。1938年,同样被西方博物学家认为已经灭绝数百万年的腔棘鱼在南非被重新发现(至少被欧洲人发现),几个世纪以来偶尔被当地渔民捕获的样本。特别是腔棘鱼,为当时流行了几十年的观点提供了科学依据,即活着的恐龙——与传说中的一种叫做mokele-mbembe的生物有关——可能仍然存在于中非(Guimont)的心脏地带。1976年,一艘美国海军船只在夏威夷附近发现了一条巨嘴鲨,这是一种以前完全不为人知的深水物种。所有这些海洋上的发现都证实了巨齿鲨可能仍然存活的观点(Coleman and Clark 66- 68,156 -57;Shuker 41;戈斯35;罗斯切)。事实上,高斯注意到,在1938年之前,受人尊敬的鱼类学家更倾向于相信巨齿鲨的继续存在,而不是腔棘鱼(39-40)。 当然,对巨齿鲨生存的猜测之所以如此
In 1999, the TV movie Shark Attack depicted an attack by mutant great white sharks on the population of Cape Town. By the time the third entry in the series, Shark Attack 3, aired in 2002, mutant great whites had lost their lustre and were replaced as antagonists with the megalodon: a giant shark originating not in any laboratory, but history, having lived from approximately 23 to 3.6 million years ago. The megalodon was resurrected again in May 2021 through a trifecta of events. A video of a basking shark encounter in the Atlantic went viral on the social media platform TikTok, due to users misidentifying it as a megalodon caught on tape. At the same time a boy received publicity for finding a megalodon tooth on a beach in South Carolina on his fifth birthday (Scott). And finally, the video game Stranded Deep, in which a megalodon is featured as a major enemy, was released as one of the monthly free games on the PlayStation Plus gaming service.
These examples form part of a larger trend of alleged megalodon sightings in recent years, emerging as a component of the modern resurgence of cryptozoology. In the words of Bernard Heuvelmans, the Belgian zoologist who both popularised the term and was a leading figure of the field, cryptozoology is the “science of hidden animals”, which he further explained were
more generally referred to as ‘unknowns’, even though they are typically known to local populations—at least sufficiently so that we often indirectly know of their existence, and certain aspects of their appearance and behaviour. It would be better to call them animals ‘undescribed by science,’ at least according to prescribed zoological rules. (1-2)
In other words, a large aspect of cryptozoology as a field is taking the legendary creatures of non-Western mythology and finding materialist explanations for them compatible with Western biology. In many ways, this is a relic of the era of European imperialism, when many creatures of Africa and the Americas were “hidden animals” to European eyes (Dendle 200-01; Flores 557; Guimont). A major example of this is Bigfoot beliefs, a large subset of which took Native American legends about hairy wild men and attempted to prove that they were actually sightings of relict Gigantopithecus. These “hidden animals”—Bigfoot, Nessie, the chupacabra, the glawackus—are referred to as ‘cryptids’ by cryptozoologists (Regal 22, 81-104).
Almost unique in cryptozoology, the megalodon is a cryptid based entirely on Western scientific development, and even the notion that it survives comes from standard scientific analysis (albeit analysis which was later superseded). Much like living mammoths and Bigfoot, what might be called the ‘megalodon as cryptid hypothesis’ serves to reinforce a fairy tale of its own. It reflects the desire to believe that there are still areas of the Earth untouched enough by human destruction to sustain massive animal life (Dendle 199-200). Indeed, megalodon’s continued existence would help absolve humanity for the oceanic aspect of the Sixth Extinction, by its role as an alternative apex predator; cryptozoologist Michael Goss even proposed that whales and giant squids are rare not from human causes, but precisely because megalodons are feeding on them (40). Horror scholar Michael Fuchs has pointed out that shark media, particularly the 1975 film Jaws and its 2006 video game adaptation Jaws Unleashed, are imbued with eco-politics (Fuchs 172-83). These connections, as well as the modern megalodon’s surge in popularity, make it notable that none of Syfy’s climate change-focused Sharknado films featured a megalodon.
Despite the lack of a Megalodonado, the popular appeal of the megalodon serves as an important case study. Given its scientific origin and dynamic relationship with popular culture, I argue that the ‘megalodon as cryptid hypothesis’ illustrates how the boundaries between ‘hard’ science and mythology, fiction and reality, as well as ‘monster’ and ‘animal’, are not as firm as advocates of the Western science tradition might believe. As this essay highlights, science can be a mythology of its own, and monsters can serve as its gods of the gaps—or, in the case of megalodon, the god of the depths.
Megalodon Fossils: A Short History
Ancient peoples of various cultures likely viewed fossilised teeth of megalodons in the area of modern-day Syria (Mayor, First Fossil Hunters 257). Over the past 2500 years, Native American cultures in North America used megalodon teeth both as curios and cutting tools, due to their large size and serrated edges. A substantial trade in megalodon teeth fossils existed between the cultures inhabiting the areas of the Chesapeake Bay and Ohio River Valley (Lowery et al. 93-108). A 1961 study found megalodon teeth present as offerings in pre-Columbian temples across Central America, including in the Mayan city of Palenque in Mexico and Sitio Conte in Panama (de Borhegyi 273-96). But these cases led to no mythologies incorporating megalodons, in contrast to examples such as the Unktehi, a Sioux water monster of myth likely inspired by a combination of mammoth and mosasaur fossils (Mayor, First Americans 221-38).
In early modern Europe, megalodon teeth were initially referred to as ‘tongue stones’, due to their similarity in size and shape to human tongues—just one of many ways modern cryptozoology comes from European religious and mystical thought (Dendle 190-216). In 1605, English scholar Richard Verstegan published his book A Restitution of Decayed Intelligence in Antiquities, which included an engraving of a tongue stone, making megalodon teeth potentially the subject of the first known illustration of any fossil (Davidson 333). In Malta, from the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries, megalodon teeth, known as ‘St. Paul’s tongue’, were used as charms to ward off the evil eye, dipped into drinks suspected of being poisoned, and even ground into powder and consumed as medicine (Zammit-Maempel, “Evil Eye” plate III; Zammit-Maempel, “Handbills” 220; Freller 31-32).
While megalodon teeth were valued in and of themselves, they were not incorporated into myths, or led to a belief in megalodons still being extant. Indeed, save for their size, megalodon teeth were hard to distinguish from those of living sharks, like great whites. Instead, both the identification of megalodons as a species, and the idea that they might still be alive, were notions which originated from extrapolations of the results of nineteenth and twentieth century European scientific studies. In particular, the major culprit was the famous British 1872-76 HMS Challenger expedition, which led to the establishment of oceanography as a branch of science.
In 1873, Challenger recovered fossilised megalodon teeth from the South Pacific, the first recovered in the open ocean (Shuker 48; Goss 35; Roesch). In 1959, the zoologist Wladimir Tschernezky of Queen Mary College analysed the teeth recovered by the Challenger and argued (erroneously, as later seen) that the accumulation of manganese dioxide on its surface indicated that one had to have been deposited within the last 11,000 years, while another was given an age of 24,000 years (1331-32). However, these views have more recently been debunked, with megalodon extinction occurring over two million years ago at the absolute latest (Pimiento and Clements 1-5; Coleman and Huyghe 138; Roesch).
Tschernezky’s 1959 claim that megalodons still existed as of 9000 BCE was followed by the 1963 book Sharks and Rays of Australian Seas, a posthumous publication by ichthyologist David George Stead. Stead recounted a story told to him in 1918 by fishermen in Port Stephens, New South Wales, of an encounter with a fully white shark in the 115-300 foot range, which Stead argued was a living megalodon. That this account came from Stead was notable as he held a PhD in biology, had founded the Wildlife Preservation Society of Australia, and had debunked an earlier supposed sea monster sighting in Sydney Harbor in 1907 (45-46). The Stead account formed the backbone of cryptozoological claims for the continued existence of the megalodon, and after the book’s publication, multiple reports of giant shark sightings in the Pacific from the 1920s and 1930s were retroactively associated with relict megalodons (Shuker 43, 49; Coleman and Huyghe 139-40; Goss 40-41; Roesch).
A Monster of Science and Culture
As I have outlined above, the ‘megalodon as cryptid hypothesis’ had as its origin story not in Native American or African myth, but Western science: the Challenger Expedition, a London zoologist, and an Australian ichthyologist. Nor was the idea of a living megalodon necessarily outlandish; in the decades after the Challenger Expedition, a number of supposedly extinct fish species had been discovered to be anything but. In the late 1800s, the goblin shark and frilled shark, both considered ‘living fossils’, had been found in the Pacific (Goss 34-35). In 1938, the coelacanth, also believed by Western naturalists to have been extinct for millions of years, was rediscovered (at least by Europeans) in South Africa, samples having occasionally been caught by local fishermen for centuries. The coelacanth in particular helped give scientific legitimacy to the idea, prevalent for decades by that point, that living dinosaurs—associated with a legendary creature called the mokele-mbembe—might still exist in the heart of Central Africa (Guimont). In 1976, a US Navy ship off Hawaii recovered a megamouth shark, a deep-water species completely unknown prior. All of these oceanic discoveries gave credence to the idea that the megalodon might also still survive (Coleman and Clark 66-68, 156-57; Shuker 41; Goss 35; Roesch). Indeed, Goss has noted that prior to 1938, respectable ichthyologists were more likely to believe in the continued existence of the megalodon than the coelacanth (39-40).
Of course, the major reason why speculation over megalodon survival had suc