Livyatan is actually thought to hunt young megalodons. So the whale can kill the younger less experienced shark.
C. megalodon was, for almost 30 My, the apex predator, just in the top of the marine food chain.The only known Miocene adversary of the megalodon was the mighty Livyatan melvillei, not because this predatory toothed extinct whale was more ferocious, but because Livyatan melvillei hunted in packs, like present sperm whales.Not even a megalodon would attack this whale, except in case of juvenils lost from their companion's pack, or wounded and lonely individuals.
As the Megalodon is an extinct species of shark, there is no present day contest!
Brygompheseter Because It Lived In Pods And Can Easily Kill A Megalodon.
megalodon
Liopleurodon
A megalodon would have been between 16 and 20 metres long.
Tough One. I Would Chose Either But I Would Have To Go With Megalodon Because It Is Much Larger Than The Dunkleosteus. Despite The Dunkleosteus Having Tough Armor, Megalodon Could Have Bitten Through Dunkleosteus Easily. And Megalodon Also Had Much More Bigger Speed So It Could Catch Up With The Dunkleosteus Easily. NOTE: THEY DID NOT MEET! Megalodon First Appeared Around In The Miocene Era But Dunkleosteus First Appeared Around At The Devion Era.
Fossil evidence suggests that the Megalodon would have fed upon many other animals, including the early whales and other sharks, as well as other large aquatic creatures. It would have had a very large appetite due to its incredibly large size and would have needed to eat in large quantities in order to sustain itself.
megalodon its attack is better than a basilosauras
Megalodon, they were larger,heavier, and stronger bite force.
we would be it's meal.
Oh, dude, that's a tough one! Like, technically speaking, Megalodon was a prehistoric shark that lived millions of years ago, and Godzilla is a fictional giant lizard monster. So, if we're going by the laws of nature and physics, Godzilla would probably take the win. But hey, in a battle of imagination, anything is possible, right?