For decades, the coelacanthexisted only in fossil records—until one turned up in a South African fishing net. It was 1938 ...
With the aid of the intracranial joint and other cranial muscles, the coelacanth usually swallows its prey whole. Its teeth are designed not so much to grab or slice fish but to prevent them from ...
Researchers classify the coelacanth under the group Sarcopterygii, which include the earliest ancestors of amphibians, reptiles, and mammals.
In a world where new species are constantly being discovered, some creatures remain hidden in the depths of the ocean, ...