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The Oakland Post

Opinion: Michigan lawmakers should hold DTE accountable The anticipation is rising: World Cup final is less than one week away Tigers enter All-Star break with optimism for second half The voice above Oakland Royal Birkdale ready to test golf’s best at the Open Championship Dive into summer: Shark films to watch The Dylan Larkin dilemma: Detroit faces a franchise-altering decision A week in the heat Obsession: Lonely love Board of Trustees approves three new degree programs Sounds of the summer: Nostalgic throwback songs Sounds of the summer: Nostalgic throwback songs Detroit trades up, continues building around Cade Cunningham Opinion: Beyond the data center The best is yet to come: HBO kicks of season 3 of House of the Dragon with two of its highest rating episodes ever Sixty countries: One campus A call for compassion A roaring end to the ace? Reading’s death and the spell that killed it When history met the octagon: gaethje’s defining moment World cup enters critical week as favorites battle for knockout spots American Sign Language club marks public debut with National Anthem performance Olivia Rodrigo brings the cure with new album Professor Ilias Cholis brings OU to the Moon and back The era of “Will they, wont they?” Hurricanes end 20-year drought, capture stanley cup in six games A new era of New York: Knicks win NBA championship Bookstore blues House passes Iran war powers resolution The great cat caper Flesh eating worm identified in US cattle More teams, more cities, more history: 2026 FIFA World Cup arrives Oakland’s Eid is fit for Hallmark Channel Oakland’s Eid is fit for Hallmark Channel Opinion: Family courts should consider infidelity Opinion: Family courts should consider infidelity Redemption road: knicks, spurs meet for NBA title Redemption road: knicks, spurs meet for NBA title Justice for Allie Act: How Michigan is preventing online sex abuse Justice for Allie Act: How Michigan is preventing online sex abuse Opinion: AI anxiety, from campus to cathedral Opinion: AI anxiety, from campus to cathedral A collision course for the stanley cup A collision course for the stanley cup Behind the game: mental health concerns in athletes Behind the game: mental health concerns in athletes Michigan’s “right to disconnect” bill Michigan’s “right to disconnect” bill Knicks, Thunder take control in conference finals Knicks, Thunder take control in conference finals OU faculty earn global recognition as top scientists OU faculty earn global recognition as top scientists “One family, one judge” bill advances The race continues: Stanley Cup conference finals Madison Beer shines on “locket deluxe” album Congress pushes against Chinese-made vehicles Rinaldi Sausages sponsors Oakland baseball The Road Ahead: Breaking Down the Lions’ 2026 Schedule Pistons’ postseason run signals a shift for the franchise A new era of hockeytown: PWHL expands to Detroit Motown Sports Village jazzing up Romulus Silk cages: The Emirate’s royal runaways OU implements water advisory Oakland County graduates left with a delayed start to adulthood More than a meal: Kroger empowers OU Why are so many scientists missing? Spirit Airlines shutdowns Dating on a budget at Oakland Gas prices rise amid Iran conflict A game of inches: how ABS is redefining baseball’s strike zone Eight teams remain in the race for the Stanley Cup Reacting to the Lions’ 2026 NFL draft The long way around Stanley Cup Playoffs set for wide‑open, highly competitive field U.S. and Italy’s relations weaken after comment regarding Pope Leo XIV Outlandish changes to a cult classic One move, five years: A new era for the transfer portal From crush to craft with Ross Gay Addie’s Albums: Sunday In Heaven The last war correspondent YHC presents: The happiness showcase Desert dreams: The magic of Coachella Thank you to The Oakland Post The final lecture: Celebrating Garry Gilbert’s legacy First Lady Melania Trump denies close relationship to Epstein Oakland’s offseason hinges on fixing size, rebounding and rim protection Love respectfully at OU Detroit Red Wings share sports marketing insights Oakland Artists Collective presents music you can see Celebrating LGBTQ+ voices in books America’s backbone is struggling: Let’s talk about it “Project Hail Mary”: A mission to save humanity Cassettes scream of punk rock again in Mexico
In that sea there be monsters
Andrew McNamara May · 2026-07-15 · via The Oakland Post

Photo courtesy of Unsplash

Photo courtesy of Unsplash

Swimmers load up beaches all dotting the eastern seaboard.

To the eyes of the sea, perhaps it looks like a buffet.

In perfect timing for the latest summer blockbuster, “Jaws” anxiety is invading sleepy hamlets the country over.

On July 3, A man was bitten while swimming at a New York City beach. Following the attack, shark sightings have reached record highs at nearby beaches.

Following the blood in the water, perhaps?

Maybe just nerves make everyone pay a little more attention. The current suspect in the Independence Day foot attack is a sand tiger shark.

Sand tiger sharks are typically rather docile towards humans — making the attack a slight anomaly.

But the ocean is full of three things: water, salt and mysteries.

Sharks bite about 60 to 65 swimmers unprovoked every year, making up only a mere fraction of murky maritime mayhem. And sometimes those mysteries bite into something much larger than a few toes.

A Knox-class destroyer clips, flying 50 stars and 13 stripes, through the seductive pitch-black duvet that is the Pacific Ocean at night. From fifty fathoms under the lightless depths, a beast erupts.

Hungry for its next meal — the ocean’s hunger is old.

Since man has looked upon the sea, it has spoken of the unfathomable residents that dwell within it. Tales of the Kraken filled the taverns of Dutch privateers with dread.

Leviathan sea serpents recur so often in mythology that it is worth a thorough academic review of their place as an archetype in culture. Sailors have braved the unknown for millennia, and while no one has yet had to ram their ship into an elder-God, they have certainly had many encounters with what humans only a few generations ago might have labeled a monster.

Modern sailors have found scarier things yet: real-life monsters.

In 1978, the Pacific Ocean was a tense place. It was the liquid-iron wall separating the west from the east. The bravest sailors of both sides were placed on this long, wet front and set to guard their empire. That Knox-Class destroyer was named the USS Stein. While looking for Soviet Submarines or some other Cold War business, something else went looking for the Stein.

The sonar cry she sent to the ocean specifically.

Little is known exactly about what happened. It was not quite as exciting as it sounds — no tendrils of the Kraken plumed from the midnight-indigo-glass surface, pulling the most heroic and beloved of men down to the bottom. At least if it did happen that way, it’s still classified.

The story goes that the sonar dome that allowed the ship to detect hostile submarines started behaving oddly. It was not a repair that could be made at sea.

To the men onboard, the failure must have been a mystery. A new Soviet Toy? Or something as boring as a fried circuit?

The truth rested somewhere in the middle.

Upon its arrival in Long Beach, the system was found to be covered in scratch marks from hooks and suckers.

The calling of a really big squid.

The internet has gone on to inflate the size of this mischievous cephalopod, with the wildest of Redditors claiming the beast might have reached 150 feet long. That is, to put it politely, outlandish.

The claim seems to originate from an old episode of Arthur C. Clarke’s “Mysterious World.” Episode two, titled “Monsters of the Deep,” details all kinds of legends of the sea — including a section recounting the USS Stein.

However, the USS Stein section seems to have lingered in the mainstream of pop science due to its military credibility.

Several naval servicemen and engineers are interviewed in the episode. The show has gone on to be praised for its factual accuracy, even while still playing with the famous author’s trademark humor.

This is because the show never said the squid was 150 feet long. As a matter of fact, the show never said how long the squid was.

A marine biologist named Frederick Aldrich (a perfect example of an aptonymism; that is when a person seems named for their job) describes the possible maximum size of a giant squid later in the episode. He claims, which modern academics are skeptical of, that the species could grow as large as 150 feet.

At no point does he claim that the creature that attacked the Stein was that large.

Modern scientists are far more boring with their reading.

They believe the vandal squid may have been simply a large giant, or perhaps a colossal squid at most. Somewhere between 30 and 50 feet, depending on who you ask.

Still not a fun thing to do the backstroke next to.

To a wise old man of the sea, the scariest monster of them all is likely not squids, nor mermaids, nor sharks — probably not even the Kraken himself is as frightening as the scariest horror of the deep.

The jellyfish. One of nature’s most simple creations. Immediately, one wonders how natural selection would allow a 500 million-year reign of such a thing.

Nature presents a scary answer. The most dangerous things do not need muscles or teeth. There is a much simpler solution: toxins.

An animal might look upon it and doubt. But the jellyfish knows. It might speak softly, but it carries many sticks.

Sharp. Big. Sticks.

There are many jellyfish in the sea. None of them are good swim friends.

An annual death toll on jellyfish is harder to get than an annual death toll on sharks. Due to their primary residence in tropical parts of the world with less developed medical care, it is believed that they are often missed as a cause of death.

What is known is that in the Philippines alone, the box jellyfish has an annual death toll of between 20 and 40 people. Experts in the Philippines even claim the death rate might be higher there.

In 2025, there were 12 recorded shark deaths worldwide.

Looks can be deceiving. The scariest monsters do not always have giant fangs and roaring muscles. They are sometimes seemingly helpless, like pathetic blobs that make one wonder how they even eat.

It is a hot summer. Some experts are already predicting the hottest year on record.

So hit the beach. Do not mind the monsters, respect the sea and it usually respects you.

Maybe even appreciate the Great Lakes. Fresh water is noted for being much more monster-free.

But to some, lampreys, sturgeons and pike are monsters enough.