The megalodon, scientifically known as Carcharocles megalodon, was a single species of giant shark that lived approximately 23 to 3.6 million years ago. While there were likely many individual megalodons during its existence, they are now extinct, and there are no living descendants or related species today. Thus, while there were many megalodons in the past, there is no "more than one" today.
As the Megalodon is an extinct species of shark that existed during the Cenozoic Era, I would say that the Megalodon is very much rarer than our present day Whale Shark.
C. megalodon is considered an extinct species by the scientific community.The more recent evidence for a living megalodon is a fossilized tooth dated one and a half million years BCE.
Megalodon became extinct a little bit more than 2 million years ago.
megalodon its attack is better than a basilosauras
it's the megalodon because they are 100 feet
It depends on the type of airplane. Megalodon is believed to have ranged in weight between 14 and 60 tons. This would make it heavier than many small airplanes, but not as heavy as most large commercial jets.
Megalodon grew to 60 feet or more in length, and weighed up to eight tons.
yes because everything said that.
Predator x
Some say It was closer to the great white than the mako. Some say mako is closer. The people who think the Great White is closer to the Megalodon gave it carcharodon and others who say not Carcharocles. So it could be Carcharodon megalodon or Carcharocles megalodon.
A lot of thing aresimilar but one thing mad them different,there size. a kid megalodon could be the size of a full grown great white.
Answer No one can say with absolute certainty what color the megalodon was. It is assumed that it followed the same pattern as all comparable animals, with a darker back and a paler belly. Answer For hunting adaptations. When prey is above the Megalodon, its darkish blue color blends in with the depths and colors of the ocean. When prey is under the Megalodon, the white underbelly blends in the the bright top of the water, where the sun shines down.