That’s why sea monsters were created! Ancient cultures invented mythological sea monsters in an effort to explain some of the mysterious events occurring in and around these vast bodies of water.
Sparhawk and Kansept have chosen S35VN steel for the aggressive blade design. This, combined with the thick spine jimping, ...
Her inherent connection to water makes her one of the most dangerous aquatic monsters in D&D 5e. The leviathan is one of the ...
The giant squid inspired kraken legends, though it is far less violent.
Charybdis became one of the most fearsome sea monsters. She used to swallow large amounts of water each day, forming whirlpools and devouring sailors. Tornadoes would form when she spit the water back ...
Crimping pies can be tricky, especially if you don't have a pie crimper handy. To make and easy (and pretty) crimped pie crust, just use your hand.
More than 30,000 creatures at Sea Life aquariums across the UK have been counted during the annual stocktake. The marine animals were counted, weighed and measured across 11 centres, including ...
The marine creatures were counted, weighed and measured across 11 centres including gentoo penguins at Sea Life London, green sea turtles at the National Sea Life Centre in Birmingham and seals at ...
Smithsonian Magazine offers up a few other ancient creatures that could fit the bill, including Nile crocodiles, goannas, and ...
In two years' time, Cetus – named after a mythological sea monster – will move through the oceans, monitoring hostile activity, listening out for ships or submarines which may pose a threat to ...