Everything You Need to Know About the Real Megalodon, an Ancient ‘Big Tooth’ Shark (2024)

  • While movie megalodon is heightened for entertainment, the real thing was still huge.
  • Megalodon was a white or mackerel shark, related to today’s great white shark.
  • Some believe the whale shark is really the largest fish to ever live.

The movie version of megalodon is back in a new sequel, Meg 2: The Trench, indicating that this ancient megafauna’s charisma is still a major draw for audiences raised on “Shark Week.” But what’s the real megalodon all about? Thankfully, there are some facts in the mix about this million-year-old shark species and the modern sharks most like it.

The word “megalodon” is from the Greek roots megalos and odon, literally “big” and “tooth.” You might recognize odon from orthodontist or periodontist, but it’s also a very common name root for ancient creatures like dinosaurs and megafauna. There’s probably a simple explanation for that: the shape and size of teeth found with a particular fossil are some of the easiest ways to tell them apart quickly. And for some species, teeth are the only thing we ever find, or at least the only thing we’re able to categorize for a long time. Anodontosaurus, a dinosaur species, was misnamed this—“lack of” teeth, like a-theism or an-archy—until scientists found its teeth later. (Paleontology is littered with these discarded wrong names based on teeth!)

More examples of “-odons”

Astrodon, a sauropod dinosaur with star-shaped teeth

Diplocynodon, an extinct genus of proto-alligators

Glyptodonts, a family of extinct armadillos

• Odontophoridae

, extinct and extant North American quails

Palaeoplethodon, extinct Caribbean salamander

Prognathodon, extinct marine lizard found globally

Pycnodontiforms, extinct European bony fish

Tinodon, extinct genus of mammal found in Europe

Troodon, a genus of small dinosaurs we only know by their teeth

Megalodon is an extinct shark that’s considered the largest fish that ever lived. The largest shark is typically the largest fish, too, like today’s largest living fish, the whale shark. Sharks occupy a clade, or family group descended from a common ancestor, that’s divided into several smaller groups based on body styles and other characteristics. The mackerel sharks are also known as the white sharks; these are informal terms for technical ones like lamniform and lamnidae, both of which come from the Greek meaning “predator fish.” Megalodon is a mackerel shark, as is today’s great white shark. (Don’t confuse either thing with the very waters-muddying shark mackerel! Or the salmon shark, which is a mackerel shark.)

These sharks are named as such because they often swim in the same waters as mackerel fish, unlike mackerel tabby cats, which were named because their stripes can look like a fish skeleton. (“Mackerel” is a very old word for a very common food-source fish, which may be why its name is applied to so many other things.) They are quite large and very capable carnivores that feed on mackerel, salmon, herring, tuna, and more.

The white sharks more specifically are known as fearsome predators. This is a huge part of the popular imagination—if you picture a scary shark, chances are good you picture something like Jaws—and has almost supplanted real knowledge about the white sharks. They are able to swim so far and eat huge quantities without having much traditional rest, which makes them hard to study. Try throwing a dart at a moving target instead of a regular dartboard!

White sharks like megalodon also have an unusual body-heat system somewhere between cold-blooded and warm-blooded, and this allows them to cover even more latitude from north to south and in different depths of water. Both behaviors are uncommon for ocean fish, because the ocean’s temperature depth zones are surprisingly well organized. Some fish travel for miles horizontally, but never venture outside of their zone of the ocean’s depth because of the dangerous temperature change.

🎥 Still Hungry for More Megalodon Facts? Eat up our latest videos, and be sure to check out even more Meg content from paleontologist Dana Ehreton, Ph.D., on the Popular Mechanics TikTok account.

Megalodon has a lot in common with its present-day relative, the great white shark. Scientists believe megalodon was heavy and bulky compared with other kinds of fish, in line with the “torpedo-shaped” members of the white shark family. Encyclopedia Britannica explains that the fossil record leads scientists to estimate the largest megalodon was up to 58 to 82 feet long. To call megalodon the largest fish to ever exist, we must default to the estimate of 82 feet, because the longest whale shark we know of was 61.7 feet. (That was not based on an estimate, either, but an accurate measurement of a real animal.)

But there’s a personality dynamic at play when we think about the megalodon versus the whale shark. A more average 39-foot whale shark weighs about 30,000 pounds, while scientists estimate that the megalodon ranged from 66,000 pounds up to 143,000 pounds. And the whale shark is a docile scoop feeder, honestly closer to a baleen whale than our mental image of a scary shark. Encyclopedia Britannica calls the whale shark “harmless,” and its mouth contains up to 300 rows of the tiniest teeth. On the other hand, the largest megalodon tooth we have an example of is nearly 7 inches long and very pointed and sharp.

Everything You Need to Know About the Real Megalodon, an Ancient ‘Big Tooth’ Shark (4)

A diagram comparing various size estimates for the extinct shark, Otodus megalodon, to Carcharodon carcharias (great white shark), Rhincodon typus (whale shark), and a human.

Everything You Need to Know About the Real Megalodon, an Ancient ‘Big Tooth’ Shark (5)

Stjepan Sucec from Pokupsko Village, in central Croatia, some 60 kilometers from the capital, Zagreb, holds a tooth that he found in river Kupa during his search for shells in Pokupsko, on August 21, 2015. Geologist Drazen Japundzic from the Natural History Museum in Zagreb acknowledged that is probably a tooth of Megalodon Shark (Charcharodon megalodon) who lived approximately 16 to 2.6 million years ago during Neogene period in Cenozoic. The Megadolon is regarded as one of the largest and most powerful predators in history.

It’s easy to see how megalodon captures the public imagination. Scientists use the term “charismatic megafauna” to refer to animals like pandas and great white sharks. These animals capture our hearts or, in the case of the shark, our most personal-feeling fears. Megalodon also appeals in an almost cryptozoologic way, the way the Loch Ness Monster is thought to be an imaginative version of something like a sauropod dinosaur.

We understand the deep ocean very little, even today after decades of hard work by scientists around the world. It could be that megalodon is one part great white shark, one part shrouded-in-mystery giant squid. And that makes for very exciting viewing.

Everything You Need to Know About the Real Megalodon, an Ancient ‘Big Tooth’ Shark (6)

Caroline Delbert

Caroline Delbert is a writer, avid reader, and contributing editor at Pop Mech. She's also an enthusiast of just about everything. Her favorite topics include nuclear energy, cosmology, math of everyday things, and the philosophy of it all.

Everything You Need to Know About the Real Megalodon, an Ancient ‘Big Tooth’ Shark (2024)

FAQs

Is the megalodon still alive in 2024? ›

A meg, short for megalodon, is an enormous shark that existed in prehistoric times but is now extinct. They were 70 feet long and weighed 100 tons, which is three times the size of the largest great white shark ever recorded.

How do you tell if a megalodon tooth is real or fake? ›

Inspection of Root and Blade:

The root and blade of a Megalodon tooth can provide valuable clues about its authenticity. In genuine fossils, the root is often well-defined and exhibits natural features, such as nutrient foramina (small holes) and root lobes, which are indicative of the tooth's biological origin.

How do we know the megalodon is real? ›

The only reason we know megalodon even existed is because of its teeth, which are now prized fossils found on beaches and in ancient riverbeds and archaeological sites. In fact, most of what we know (or think we know) about megalodon has been gleaned from its teeth.

What killed the last megalodon? ›

As ice formed at the poles and the sea level dropped, these pupping grounds would have been destroyed. A study from 2022 suggests that competition with great white sharks for food may also have contributed to megalodon's downfall. Studies of fossilised megalodon and great white teeth show that their diets overlapped.

Could a megalodon still exist? ›

There is simply no room, ecologically speaking, for a megalodon to exist. So, to sum everything up... Megalodon is NOT alive today, it went extinct around 3.5 million years ago.

Have people found a real megalodon tooth? ›

The Sampsons took their exciting find to the Calvert Marine Museum, where paleontology curator Stephen Godfrey confirmed their suspicions: It was indeed the tooth of a megalodon, the massive sharks that lived more than 23 million years ago.

What is the largest megalodon tooth ever found? ›

The largest megalodon teeth on record reached a staggering 7.5 inches (190mm)! Compare this to the largest great whites, whose teeth top out around 3 inches long. Wow! Their teeth were bone-crunching and flesh-cutting tools evolved for grasping powerful prey such as baleen whales.

Is a megalodon tooth worth money? ›

To give you a general price range for commercial grade (has some defects) Megalodon teeth. 2-3” teeth will typically be in the $20 to $60 range, 3-4” teeth will fall into the $50-100 range, 4-5” teeth the $100-200 range, 5-5 ½” teeth $200-400, etc.

How big is megalodon poop? ›

💩 That's right; scientists have apparently found petrified portions of their feces, too! One report from a site in South Carolina documents coprolites (the fancy science term for fossilized poo) of a large shark, the largest of which totaled around 5.5 inches long.

Has a megalodon skeleton been found? ›

So far we've only found teeth and vertebrae of megalodons. Like other sharks, most of their skeleton is made from cartilage which doesn't preserve well in the fossil record. There's still lively debate in the scientific community about the modern species of sharks to which megalodon is most closely related.

What do megalodons eat? ›

Fossil evidence shows that the Megalodon primarily fed on large marine mammals including whales, dolphins, sea lions, dugongs (sea cows), as well as sea turtles and large fish.

What's bigger than a megalodon? ›

In fact, Megalodon might not even have been the largest predator in the ocean at the time it was alive - the recently discovered Leviathan whale (Livyatan melvillei) was potentially larger than Megalodon and occupied the same territorial waters.

How can I tell if my megalodon tooth is real? ›

Enamel: Smooth enamel is an important feature of Meg teeth. The enamel on the tooth on the left is peeled, while the tooth on the right has smooth enamel. Root: A complete and perfect root separates a nice tooth from an exceptional tooth. This tooth has nubs on each side which is a rare feature in Megalodon Teeth.

Did megalodon exist with humans? ›

While the popular 2018 movie, "The Meg," pits modern humans against an enormous megalodon sharks, it's actually more than likely that the beast died out before humans even evolved. But it's difficult to pinpoint the exact date that the megalodon went extinct because the fossil record is incomplete.

How long would the megalodon live? ›

Megalodon was a long-lived animal. Scientists think that it lived for more than 100 years! Scientists think this because when paleontologists find fossilized vertebrae of Megalodon, they can determine the age of the animal when it died.

Are they bringing back the megalodon? ›

Bringing back the megalodon shark is an exciting idea, but most scientists agree the likelihood of success is very low. Megalodons went extinct over 2 million years ago, so their DNA is long gone. Without intact DNA, it would be impossible to clone the shark or engineer it in a lab.

Is megalodon bigger than blue whales? ›

Answer and Explanation:

No, a megalodon is not bigger than a blue whale. The blue whale is the largest animal to have ever lived. Female blue whales reach a length of about 82 feet, and males are typically about 79 feet on average. However, megalodons were large, probably about 59 feet in length.

How big is a megalodon to a human? ›

Now, a new study published in the journal Scientific Reports believes it's cracked the code to the true size of the mighty megalodon, which they predict was 16 meters (52 feet) long with fins the size of an adult human.

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