15 Million Years before the Megalodon, This Giant Ancient Shark Prowled the Oceans
NEWS | 31 December 2025
I agree my information will be processed in accordance with the Scientific American and Springer Nature Limited Privacy Policy . We leverage third party services to both verify and deliver email. By providing your email address, you also consent to having the email address shared with third parties for those purposes. Before the famously huge megalodon, another fearsome ocean predator roamed the seas. According to a paper published earlier this year in Communications Biology, a massive shark that exceeded the size of modern-day great whites prowled the water off what is now Australia 15 million years before the megalodon arose. By analyzing a set of five vertebrae found on an Australian beach, paleontologists estimated that this ancient shark likely spanned about eight meters in length—for comparison, great white sharks tend to grow to around six meters today. “It would’ve looked for all the world like a modern, gigantic shark, because this is the beauty of it,” said Benjamin Kear, a senior curator at the Swedish Museum of Natural History and a study co-author, to the Associated Press. “This is a body model that has worked for 115 million years, like an evolutionary success story.” On supporting science journalism If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today. Although sharks have a 450-million-year-long history on Earth, the ancestors of modern great whites don’t show up in the fossil record until 135 million years ago. And crucially, these ancestors were typically small fry—just a meter or so in length. Older discoveries had suggested that truly giant sharks such as megalodons (which could reach 17 meters) evolved around 100 million years ago. But the new analysis suggests that giant sharks came on the scene earlier than previously thought. The team behind the discovery now plans to look for other ancient giant shark remains to try and color in some more of sharks’ evolutionary tree. “They must have been around before,” Kear told the AP. “This thing had ancestors.”Before the famously huge megalodon, another fearsome ocean predator roamed the seas. According to a paper published earlier this year in Current Biology, a massive shark that exceeded the size of modern-day great whites prowled the water off what is now Australia 15 million years before the megalodon arose. By analyzing a set of five vertebrae found on an Australian beach, paleontologists estimated that this ancient shark likely spanned about eight meters in length—for comparison, great white sharks tend to grow to around six meters today. “It would’ve looked for all the world like a modern, gigantic shark, because this is the beauty of it,” said Benjamin Kear, a senior curator at the Swedish Museum of Natural History and a study co-author, to the Associated Press. “This is a body model that has worked for 115 million years, like an evolutionary success story.” Although sharks have a 450-million-year-long history on Earth, the ancestors of modern great whites don’t show up in the fossil record until 135 million years ago. And crucially, these ancestors were typically small fry—just a meter or so in length. Older discoveries had suggested that truly giant sharks such as megalodons (which could reach 17 meters) evolved around 100 million years ago. But the new analysis suggests that giant sharks came on the scene earlier than previously thought. The team behind the discovery now plans to look for other ancient giant shark remains to try and color in some more of sharks’ evolutionary tree. “They must have been around before,” Kear told the AP. “This thing had ancestors.”
Author: Sarah Lewin Frasier. Claire Cameron.
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