Unlike Great White Sharks, Meg didn't really have anything to keep them warm when ice age arrive so they died from that. Great White did and they survived.
No. Megalodon reached 60 feet, whites only 23 maximum.
yesOf the non-extinct species, the Whale Shark is the largest, exceeding even the Great White Shark, so the answer is Yes.Of the extinct species, the most likely to be the biggest shark is the extinct Megalodon. The Megalodon was about 13 meters long and a single tooth was estimated to be 4 inches long!YesYes. This also makes it the biggest fish in the world.
No, the only living relative of megalodon today is great white sharks.
NONE OF THE SHARKS IN THE SEA ARE ALMOST RELATED TO THE GREAT WHITE SHARK BECAUSE ALL SHARKS HAVE DIFFERENT ABILITYS.
Well the whale shark is quite a huge shark. So the megalodon is second largest shark. It has been proved that whale sharks are just like whales but with spots. The magalodon believed to be extinct still lives to be second largest shark.
Apparently, there is film of orcas taking out a Great White Shark...
The biggest meglodon was about 85ft long. The average is between 80ft to 75ft big
megalodon is a whopping 16m then in the order of the rest of the sharks whale shark 12m basking shark7m great white5m
The Largest prehistoric shark was 'Megalodon' which could reach around 60feet in length - considerably more than today's Great White shark 'Carcharodon' Megalodon had teeth up to approx. 7 inches in length and would have been a formidable hunter probably eating marine reptiles and other sharks of the time.
megalodon sharks, great white sharks, frilled sharks, thresher sharks, tiger sharks, sand tiger sharks, lemon sharks, bull sharks, whale sharks, basking sharks, lepord sharks,black tip sharks. there is 12.
No it was extinct about 1.5 Million years ago.but no one can say that it is totally extinct cauze 93-95 % of the oceans are unexplored
The tooth of a megalodon, a prehistoric massive killer shark, was found in Michigan. Carcharodon megalodon, or the "megatooth" shark went extinct 2 million years ago. It reached lengths of more than 60 feet.