High-speed footage captured by Japanese researchers in 2008 revealed the goblin shark's jaw projection occurs in approximately one-tenth of a second, faster than any other documented vertebrate jaw mechanism.
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5/17/2026
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10 Creepiest Creatures Rumoured To Lurk In The Deepest Trenches
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In 1898, a nearly 3-meter-long specimen with translucent pink skin and a bladelike snout, later identified as a goblin shark, was caught off Yokohama, Japan.
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The goblin shark is the only surviving member of the Mitsukurinidae family, a lineage that diverged from other sharks approximately 125 million years ago.
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