Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Giant squid captured on film for the first time

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Giant squid are the stuff of fiction but the monsters of the deep have at last been filmed in their natural habitat.

Thought to be the inspiratio­n for the mythical Kraken which was reputed to drag ships and sailors to their doom, the giant squid has long fascinated naturalist­s and story-tellers.

A Japanese film crew has now managed to film the animal at a depth of a third of a mile beneath the waves, the first time it has been videoed in the deep water it inhabits.

Footage of the giant squid was captured when a three-man submersibl­e team descended to a depth of 2,066 feet (630 metres) in the northern Pacific Ocean.

The crew spent 400 hours in the submersibl­e and carried out 100 missions in a project to film the giant squid, the world’s largest invertebra­te.

Once they located the animal, which was 10-feet long (3 metres), they were able to follow it down to 900m where it vanished into an ocean abyss. Tsunemi Kubodera, of Japan’s National Science Museum, described finding the animal as a ‘shining and so beautiful’ moment.

He and scientific colleagues succeeded in filming the giant squid after teaming up with Japanese broadcaste­r NHK and the US Discovery Channel.

Giant squid, Architeuth­is, are known to eat other squid and grenadier fish, and are themselves prey to sperm whales.

Sucker injuries on the skin of whales, backed up by stomach contents, have hinted at bloody battles to the death between the two leviathans.

In 1965 a Societ whaler claimed to have witnessed a giant squid and a 40 tonne sperm whale locked in mortal combat.

The squid’s head was reportedly found in its opponant’s stomach but the whale didn’t survive the encounter either as it was said to have been strangled by the tentacles wrapped in a fatal embrace around its throat.

A photograph of a giant squid was first taken in 1874 when the Reverend Moses Harvey, a Newfoundla­nd amateur naturalist and writer, bought one for 410 after it was accidental­ly caught by a fisherman.

 ??  ?? giant squid are thought to be the inspiratio­n for the mythical kraken which could attack and sink ships submersibl­e crew followed the squid down to a depth of 2,953 (900m)
giant squid are thought to be the inspiratio­n for the mythical kraken which could attack and sink ships submersibl­e crew followed the squid down to a depth of 2,953 (900m)
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