super intelligent triassic kraken?

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DariusAmurdarja

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Dec 22, 2011
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look that up

The Triassic kraken is a gigantic ancient cephalopod hypothesized to be responsible for the deaths of Triassic ichthyosaurs belonging the genus Shonisaurus preserved at the Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park in Nevada.[1] Vertebral remains from the ichthyosaurs are arranged into almost geometric patterns that resemble the sucker discs on an octopus tentacle, leading to the contention by Mark McMenamin and Dianna L. Schulte McMenamin that the patterns represent Earth's earliest examples of self-portraiture, possibly implying high intelligence in the hypothesized Mesozoic cephalopod. The vertebral centra in the Specimen U sample, for example, are arrayed in a biserial pattern, in an arrangement that differs from their original placement in the shonisaur vertebral column. Hydrodynamic considerations of the site are inconsistent with the hypothesis that currents were responsible for the unusual arrangement of bones.[2]
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Shonisaurus was colossal...so if such a kraken existed it must have been gigantic.
 
Could be two dead fish side by side. Except for the physics of laying them down so evenly...
 
Shonisaurus is not a fish. It is a reptile the size of a spermwhale. There lay many fossils of shonisaurus at the same spot. Allmost all have broken rips and twisted necks. the vertrebra are arranged in that weird way.
 
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