"We've never seen a fish this big," said Mark Waddington, senior captain of the Tole Mour, CIMI's sail training ship. "The last oarfish we saw was three feet long."
LOS ANGELES
A marine science instructor snorkeling off the Southern California
coast spotted something out of a fantasy novel: the silvery carcass of
an 18-foot-long, serpent-like oarfish.
Jasmine Santana
of the Catalina Island Marine Institute needed more than 15 helpers to
drag the giant sea creature with eyes the size of half dollars to shore
on Sunday.
Staffers at the institute are calling it the discovery of a lifetime.
This photo released courtesy of the Catalina
Island Marine Institute taken on Sunday Oct. 13, 2013, shows the crew of
sailing school vessel Tole Mour and Catalina Island Marine Institute
instructors holding an 18-foot-long oarfish that was found in the waters
of Toyon Bay on Santa Catalina Island, Calif. A marine science
instructor snorkeling off the Southern California coast spotted the
silvery carcass of the 18-foot-long, serpent-like oarfish.
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AP Photo/Catalina Island Marine Institute
"We've never seen a fish this big," said Mark
Waddington, senior captain of the Tole Mour, CIMI's sail training ship.
"The last oarfish we saw was three feet long."
Because
oarfish dive more than 3,000 feet deep, sightings of the creatures are
rare and they are largely unstudied, according to CIMI.
The obscure fish apparently died of natural causes.
Tissue samples and video footage were sent to be studied by biologists
at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Santana
spotted something shimmering about 30 feet deep while snorkeling during a
staff trip in Toyon Bay at Santa Catalina Island, about two dozen miles
from the mainland.
"She said, 'I have to drag this thing out of here or nobody will believe me,'" Waddington said.
After she dragged the carcass by the tail for more than 75 feet, staffers waded in and helped her bring it to shore.
The
carcass was on display Tuesday for 5th, 6th, and 7th grade students
studying at CIMI. It will be buried in the sand until it decomposes and
then its skeleton will be reconstituted for display, Waddington said.
The
oarfish, which can grow to more than 50 feet, is a deep-water pelagic
fish - the longest bony fish in the world, according to CIMI.
They are likely responsible for sea serpent legends throughout history.
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