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Searching for The Kraken’s Cousin:

kraken jumbo squid

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#1    Still Waters

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Posted 12 October 2012 - 12:58 PM

William Gilly has seen a Kraken. The mythical squid beast with ship-dooming tentacles surely exists, Gilly says, because he’s seen a baby one. “It was this big around,” he says, making a circle as big as a tire with his arms, a proud, boyish smile on his face. Fishermen spotted the carcass of the 8-foot-long, 400-pound baby giant squid in Monterey Bay three years ago, according to Gilly.

“If you’re an assistant professor proposing to study it, I don’t think you’d get tenure,” he says. “But one has to exist.”

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#2    R4z3rsPar4d0x

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Posted 13 October 2012 - 10:06 PM

Heres what I dont understand, Squids have a fast life meaning they only live for about 2 years from what Iv read, Now im guessing they would grow fast to if there going to be mythical Kraken size. I mean werent Krakens said to be so big they were mistaken for islands..??
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#3    Vidgange

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Posted 13 October 2012 - 11:25 PM

View PostR4z3rsPar4d0x, on 13 October 2012 - 10:06 PM, said:

Heres what I dont understand, Squids have a fast life meaning they only live for about 2 years from what Iv read, Now im guessing they would grow fast to if there going to be mythical Kraken size. I mean werent Krakens said to be so big they were mistaken for islands..??

I'm guessing certain stories are exaggerations... You see something unfamiliar and terrifying, and suddenly you think it's 10x the actual size.
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#4    NickKilcoyne

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 10:48 AM

Perhaps like other species, the bigger ones tend to live longer. Look at the tortoise, it lives, what, 200 years? Maybe they only need to mate every few years or perhaps even centuries due to their elongated existence, causing their population to be sparse.

#5    Rafterman

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 02:01 PM

I always considered a Kraken more akin to an octopus than a squid.

#6    Super-Fly

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 02:40 PM

Ive always considered a kraken more akin to fantasy then reality.


Be cool if they did find proof, maybe study it, learn from it, etc.

Anyway, im off for a toast sandwich.

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#7    Nathan DiYorio

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 02:57 PM

View PostSuper-Fly, on 14 October 2012 - 02:40 PM, said:

Ive always considered a kraken more akin to fantasy then reality.

I love when people just shut themselves off completely instead of thinking: "Hm, we have giant squid. I wonder if what people used to call a "Kraken" could actually be something that really actually exists just with a different name. Gee, that's kind of a reasonable assumption, isn't it?"

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#8    Super-Fly

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 03:44 PM

View PostXetan, on 14 October 2012 - 02:57 PM, said:

I love when people just shut themselves off completely instead of thinking: "Hm, we have giant squid. I wonder if what people used to call a "Kraken" could actually be something that really actually exists just with a different name. Gee, that's kind of a reasonable assumption, isn't it?"

Just an opinion, you have yours, i have mine.

Plus, if they called a giant squid a kraken, then it doesnt mean they exist.

Just means that we in this day and age are more educated and wise in comparison to
centuries ago.


Thanks for the reply.

Edited by Super-Fly, 14 October 2012 - 03:48 PM.

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#9    Ravinoff

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 05:01 PM

Eh, the Humboldt squid is relatively small as gigantic cephalopods go. They grow to be about five feet long or so (mantle length, doesn't count tentacles) and get to 100 pounds. The giant squid Architeuthus dux can grow to 8 feet by the mantle, and 350 pounds (length including the two extended tentacles and the arms can be 40 feet or more, though). The giant squid's big brother, the colossal squid is only known from a few specimens, one weighing over 1000 pounds and being 33 feet long with the tentacles, but could in theory grow to be somewhat larger. That doesn't preclude the existence of larger species in the deep ocean, it just means we haven't found them yet.

#10    R4z3rsPar4d0x

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 05:07 PM

View PostVidgange, on 13 October 2012 - 11:25 PM, said:

I'm guessing certain stories are exaggerations... You see something unfamiliar and terrifying, and suddenly you think it's 10x the actual size.
Yeah but I mean you gotta consider these stories have some grain of truth to them
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#11    R4z3rsPar4d0x

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 05:12 PM

View PostRavinoff, on 14 October 2012 - 05:01 PM, said:

Eh, the Humboldt squid is relatively small as gigantic cephalopods go. They grow to be about five feet long or so (mantle length, doesn't count tentacles) and get to 100 pounds. The giant squid Architeuthus dux can grow to 8 feet by the mantle, and 350 pounds (length including the two extended tentacles and the arms can be 40 feet or more, though). The giant squid's big brother, the colossal squid is only known from a few specimens, one weighing over 1000 pounds and being 33 feet long with the tentacles, but could in theory grow to be somewhat larger. That doesn't preclude the existence of larger species in the deep ocean, it just means we haven't found them yet.
Yeah I saw this thing on MonsterQuest where they were looking for the Kraken and they got footage of these insanely long tentacles but the creature was too deep to make out, so all they really saw were its large tentacles. interesting stuff
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THAT IS NOT DEAD WHICH MAY ETERNAL LIE, AND WITH STRANGE AEONS EVEN DEATH MAY DIE - H.P. LOVECRAFT

YOUR PUNY TECHNOLOGY IS NO MATCH FOR THE FORCES OF  NATURE!

#12    Nathan DiYorio

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 06:20 PM

View PostSuper-Fly, on 14 October 2012 - 03:44 PM, said:

Plus, if they called a giant squid a kraken, then it doesnt mean they exist.

Just means that we in this day and age are more educated and wise in comparison to
centuries ago.

What the balls does this mean? If Kraken and Squid are the same thing, then yes, Kraken existed. Sure, it wasn't an island that sank when docked upon. Nobody is saying to rigidly follow a mythology. If you go to Spain and start talking about calamar, does that mean squids don't exist anymore?

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#13    Super-Fly

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 06:23 PM

View PostXetan, on 14 October 2012 - 06:20 PM, said:

What the balls does this mean? If Kraken and Squid are the same thing, then yes, Kraken existed. Sure, it wasn't an island that sank when docked upon. Nobody is saying to rigidly follow a mythology. If you go to Spain and start talking about calamar, does that mean squids don't exist anymore?

Logic, windows, flying out.

They might have had ther wires crossed thats all,

Mistaking one thing for another.

Still,

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#14    WatchingTheStars

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 07:45 PM

I actually think it's possible a large octopus might live in the ocean discovered.

An octopus the size of an island? No. An octopus bigger than the ones we know of? Sure, it could happen. It might not be true, but we don't know.

But I do believe Kraken sightings might have just been giant squid.

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#15    Ravinoff

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Posted 14 October 2012 - 11:29 PM

View PostR4z3rsPar4d0x, on 14 October 2012 - 05:12 PM, said:

Yeah I saw this thing on MonsterQuest where they were looking for the Kraken and they got footage of these insanely long tentacles but the creature was too deep to make out, so all they really saw were its large tentacles. interesting stuff
Any idea where they were? If they were in warmer waters, I'm thinking it might be a Magnapinna squid, possibly an unidentified species. They've spotted a few extremely long-armed bigfin squid in very deep water in the Gulf Of Mexico, and in the Pacific and Indian oceans.
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