Voto:
Good. A non-review that perfectly fits a sonic representation of the cycle and disintegration. I listened to it, and incredibly I did not find it annoying.
Voto:
I echo this. One of the rare cases where the hundred-thousandth review adds value. First of all, the ideas... and if you have something intelligent to say, there's nothing to complain about the duplication; on the contrary, it's more than welcome.
Voto:
Welcome, great debut and interesting proposal that I will listen to given the "turgid" references.
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Now I'm heading online to find tasty nonsense about the Dargos.
Voto:
The megalodon (Carcharodon megalodon or Carcharocles megalodon Louis Agassiz, 1843) is an extinct species of shark of considerable size, known for its large fossilized teeth. The scientific name megalodon comes from the Greek and means “large tooth.” Fossils of C. megalodon are found in sediments from the Miocene to the Pliocene (between 2.3 and 2.6 million years ago).

As you read the taxoboxMegalodon
Megalodon shark jaws museum of natural history 068.jpg
Reconstruction of the jaws of the Megalodon, at the American Museum of Natural History
Conservation status
Fossil
Scientific classification
Domain Eukaryota
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Subphylum Vertebrata
Class Chondrichthyes
Subclass Elasmobranchii
Superorder Selachimorpha
Order Lamniformes
Family Lamnidae or † Otodontidae
Genus Carcharodon or † Carcharocles
Species † C. megalodon
Binomial nomenclature
Carcharodon megalodon
or Carcharocles megalodon
Louis Agassiz, 1843
Synonyms
Procarcharodon megalodon
Casier, 1960
Megaselachus megalodon
Glikman, 1964
Otodus megalodon
Agassiz, 1843
The megalodon (Carcharodon megalodon or Carcharocles megalodon Louis Agassiz, 1843) is an extinct species of shark of considerable size, known for its large fossilized teeth. The scientific name megalodon comes from the Greek and means “large tooth.” Fossils of C. megalodon are found in sediments from the Miocene to the Pliocene (between 2.3 and 2.6 million years ago).

Index
1 Taxonomy
1.1 Evolution
2 Morphology
3 Distribution, habits and feeding
4 C. megalodon and cryptozoology
5 In popular culture
6 Notes
7 Other projects
8 External links
8.1 Critique of hypotheses on the current existence of megalodon
Taxonomy
There was an initial apparent description of the megalodon in 1881 by the Italian naturalist and paleontologist Roberto Massimo Lawley, who classified it as Selache manzonii.

The classification is a subject of scientific debate among experts. In the past, this animal was classified in the genus Carcharodon, like the current great white shark. In 1995, a new genus Carcharocles (belonging to the family Otodontidae) was proposed to classify the animal. Many paleontologists now support this latter theory.

The discovery of fossils assigned to the genus Megalolamna in 2016 led to a reevaluation of the genus Otodus, now considered paraphyletic (that is, part of a group with a common ancestor but without including all of its descendants). Including Carcharocles sharks in Otodus would make the genus monophyletic with the genus Megalolamna, which would be the “sister clade.”

It has been considered a close relative of the more famous, and still living, great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias), especially due to the great similarity in the shape and structure of their teeth. However, a growing number of researchers are questioning this link, embracing the hypothesis that convergent evolution is the reason why the great white shark and C. megalodon have such similar dentition. In any case, the appearance and size of C. megalodon are reconstructed precisely from this similarity.

This cladogram illustrates the relationships between the megalodon and other sharks, including the great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias).
Voto:
Insensible, wicked mystifiers and the cause of the #nihilismthatspreads uncontrollably and will bring about the death of deb.
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Down with nihilism! #nihilismprevails
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enough
Voto:
Come on ... it's a troll. Get off the homepage, it has already shown way too much patience.