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Meet ‘Megalodon’ — The 60-Foot Shark With A Bite Force That Could Crush A Car
Scott Travers · 2026-06-20 · via Forbes - Innovation
Big fish eat small fish, Finance or law of nature.

Science has spent decades trying to reconstruct Megalodon, the most powerful predator the oceans ever produced. The picture that emerges is even more unsettling than the legend.

getty

The great white shark, Carcharodon carcharias, is widely regarded as the ocean’s apex predator. It can reach around 20 feet in length, delivers one of the most powerful bites in the modern animal kingdom, and has no natural enemies as an adult. It is also, by most estimates, roughly one-third the size of Otodus megalodon: the extinct shark whose very name, translated from Greek, means “big tooth.”

Megalodon is the kind of animal that sounds like a myth even though it was real. It was enormous, and it ruled the world’s oceans for roughly 20 million years before vanishing forever, for reasons biologists are still working to understand, around 3.6 million years ago.

Megalodon’s Body Was Built For Dominance

The most immediate problem in reconstructing the megalodon is that sharks are cartilaginous fish, which means that their skeletons are made of cartilage, not bone, which rarely survives fossilization. What paleontologists are left with are teeth. And megalodon’s teeth are extraordinary: triangular, serrated and in large individuals reaching around 7 inches in length. For comparison, a great white’s teeth typically max out at about 2 inches.

From those teeth, and from rare preserved vertebrae, biologists have used scaling methods to estimate megalodon’s dimensions. According to a major 2024 reconstruction published in Palaeontologia Electronica by an international team of 26 shark and fossil experts, the species likely reached at least 50 feet in total length, with some estimates pushing considerably higher, possibly up to 80 feet in the largest individuals. That makes it not just the biggest shark that ever lived, but one of the largest predatory animals in the history of life on Earth. The same study also challenged a long-held assumption: megalodon was probably not a bulkier version of the great white, but a sleeker, more elongated animal, closer in body plan to a lemon shark.

The bite force estimates that follow from that body size are staggering. Biologists modeling megalodon’s jaw mechanics in 2008, based on its skull proportions and tooth structure, suggest a bite force on the order of tens of thousands of pounds per square inch, roughly ten times the force a great white can generate, potentially enough to crush the roof of a car like an aluminum can.

What Megalodon Ate And How We Know

Megalodon’s preferred prey appears to have been large marine mammals: whales, dolphins, dugongs and the ancestors of the animals that fill those ecological roles today. The evidence for this is preserved in the fossil record itself. Whale and pinniped bones from the Miocene and Pliocene have been found bearing bite marks that match megalodon teeth, as recorded in a 2017 Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology study, often showing catastrophic structural damage consistent with an attack powerful enough to sever through bone.

What the bite-mark evidence suggests about megalodon’s hunting method is still a matter of active interpretation. The pattern of injuries on some fossil whale bones, clustered around skeletal regions near vital structures, has led some paleontologists to propose that megalodon may have targeted areas likely to cause rapid incapacitation, rather than the softer-tissue approach more typical of great whites today.

That hypothesis remains tentative; the fossil record is fragmentary enough that ruling out opportunistic or scavenging behavior is difficult. What is clear is that this was an animal whose size and bite force allowed it to inflict devastating damage in a single strike.

The Megalodon Extinction Question

For all its dominance, megalodon is gone, and the reason why is one of the more interesting open questions in paleontology.

The leading hypothesis ties megalodon’s extinction to a dramatic shift in the ocean’s ecology around 3 to 4 million years ago. Global ocean temperatures dropped as the planet entered a cooling phase. The warm, shallow coastal seas that megalodon preferred, and that supported the high density of large prey it needed to sustain its massive body, contracted significantly. At the same time, whales were evolving in ways that may have made them harder to catch: becoming faster, more maneuverable and migrating into colder, deeper waters outside megalodon's optimal range.

A competing idea points to competition from newly emerged predators. Analysis of zinc isotopes preserved in fossilized shark teeth, published in Nature Communications in 2022, found that when great white sharks and megalodon coexisted during the Pliocene, their diets overlapped significantly, both feeding high up the same food chain on marine mammals.

Smaller and more agile, great whites may have been outcompeting megalodon for prey before that prey grew large enough to be worth a megalodon’s energy. Large body size, which had been megalodon’s greatest advantage, may have become a liability when the prey base shrank. The study’s authors conclude that megalodon’s extinction was most likely multi-causal: a convergence of prey decline, habitat loss and competitive pressure, rather than any single trigger.

What The ‘Megadolon Myth’ Gets Wrong

Megalodon lives on in popular culture as a lurking threat; the premise of films built on the idea that it might still be out there, in the deep ocean, simply undiscovered. Biologists are uniformly skeptical. An animal of megalodon’s size would need to consume enormous quantities of large prey continuously; we would find evidence of its feeding, its teeth and its kills in waters we monitor extensively. The deep ocean is not, in fact, unexplored in the way those films suggest.

What megalodon actually represents is something more interesting than a hidden monster: a window into the ocean’s past, when the food web was rich enough to sustain a predator of almost inconceivable scale.

Megalodon ruled the oceans for nearly 20 million years — but how much do you actually know about the prehistoric creatures that shaped life on Earth? Find out with this science-backed test: Dinosaur IQ Test