Top Evidences the Megalodon Shark Might Still Be Alive

Megalodon was, or is, an estimated 60-70 foot long prehistoric shark that had teeth 3-4 times larger than Great Whites and is assumed to have died out over a million years ago. Although many scientists believe it died out over a million years, some teeth have been carbon dated as being only 11,000-24,000 years old, which is a blink in terms of evolutionary time. It is assumed the shark fed on whales and looked and behaved like a Great White. These are the top reasons why the species could still be alive.
The items in this list have been selected by the author of the list for you to vote and comment on.
The Top Ten
1 Less than 5% of the worlds oceans have been explored

There is 95% of the ocean unexplored. As a result, there is a certainty that something we don't know in this year is there, which may be a Megalodon.

True but we would have found more fossils and more recent ones. The deep hasn’t been explored but megalodon couldn’t live there.

we know 25% of the seas/oceans

2 It could primarily inhabit the deepest parts of the ocean, which would explain why we haven't discovered one

The pressure and temperature differences are too much for it too handle.

3 It had no natural predators

Livyatan might have ate it and the reason it’s extinct is because it’s prey became to big for it. The T. rex had no predators but still went extinct.

4 David Stead 1981 eyewitnesses

According to Stead he spoke to several frightened local crawfish fishermen in 1981 who all reported they saw a shark of an unbelievable size take their pots and mooring. The fishermen refused to return to their fishing spot for days. They all said it was pale white and many said it was about 115 feet in length.

The fossils we find dated back to 2 million years ago. A few witnesses don’t mean anything.

5 Sea of Cortez Black demon shark eyewitnesses

In the Sea of Cortez many locals report a 60 foot black shark is known to roam the sea.

Then why haven’t we found enough fossils for it to be alive there. You could say giant squid witnesses mean the kraken is real.

6 The Mariana Trench is the deepest part of the oceans and it is still largely unexplored, Megalodon could be living there

There’s to much pressure for it to survive there and the temperature is different. And besides why would it need to go there anyway, there’s nothing to eat down there.

true

7 Megalodon could be nocturnal, another reason why it could just be so hard to discover

So true

We would still find more fossils and besides the great white isn’t nocturnal so megalodon shouldn’t be either.

8 It doesn't necessarily have to feed on whales. Perhaps it eats plankton or small fish like whales

dead wrong, the Megalodon diversify which prevented its extinction, the Megalodon is a apex carnivorous predator, the Meg would be unlikely to change its dietary patterns anytime soon, the Meg is one of many Kings who still rules the seas/ocean

Fish don’t contain the nutrients and it definitely can’t eat plankton.

9 It could stay in one place and not move around as much as a Great White

what I've seen online ever since the infancy of the internet is that the Megalodon moves as fast as it appears to be, some online videos I've seen where Great Whites swimed out of the way like prey fish & the gargantuan shadow approaching the underwater camera being a Meg above view

They wouldn’t it have been found I it didn’t move around.

10 There have been pictures of whales with huge bites taken out of them surface on the Internet

Probably by orcas. If the whales are dead then by scavengers like sleeper sharks.

I've seen amateurs & real marine scientists experimenting with marine rovers & in the background & you can see it with your own eyes an unusually massive shark shadow scaring away fish & fellow sharks like prey items, the Megs are dangerously fast & from the estimates of the videos I've watched over the years I believe the Megalodon is faster than the fastest modern marine life, the Megalodon looks like a living space shuttle from the videos I've seen, I say we collectively release 1.1 billion marine drone rovers without risking anyones lives in the near/distance future that way with all of the rovers exploring places no man has ever gone before in the seas/oceans we would fully know what lurks beneath the waters