13 Mysterious And Bizarre Ocean Finds You Won’t Believe

What has the ocean decided to reveal this time? These 13 unexpected things that have bubbled up from the deep are a reminder that the sea is full of mysteries, with discoveries that range from strange to downright eerie.

Last week, researchers in Tenerife stumbled across a male angler fish in shallow waters. Angler fish can live as deep as 2,000 meters, and are virtually never seen near the surface. It is unclear what prompted this one to venture up, although it perished shortly after.

This mysterious metal ball washed ashore in Japan in 2023, prompting officials to scramble a bomb squad. Ultimately the ball was a false alarm, and identified as a deep sea buoy.

Bajorat attempted to sail around the world in 2015. However, he went missing late in the year, and was discovered dead on his yacht 40 miles from the Philippines. Surprisingly, his body stayed incredibly well preserved thanks to the dry and salty ocean air.

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This giant metal die washed ashore in Lake Coeur d’Alene. Nobody knows where it came from, or what it was used for.

The giant oarfish is a large deep sea herring that is seldom seen near the surface. Legend says they predict earthquakes. This one appeared off the coast of New Taipei’s Ruifang District, likely due to injury. We’re still waiting on the earthquake.

That’s right. If you think water will help you stay away from spiders, think again. Everybody knows about sea snakes, but there are giant sea spiders too.

It’s not often that a long lost city actually turns up, but ancient Egypt’s Heracleion really did. It’s located 6.5 km off the coast of Alexandria.

This silly scene is the result of a broken shipping container.

One of the rarest sharks, a Canadian fisherman caught this deep sea beast in 2016.

This weird shape on the Baltic Sea floor looks like a crashed UFO. However, experts assure us it’s just a rock formation. I guess we have to take their word for it.

A Portuguese Man o’ War washed up on Fort Walton Beach, Florida. Don’t touch that thing.

In 2016, researchers used carbon isotopes to date an ancient Greenland shark. The shark was 392 years old, meaning it lived at the same time as Oliver Cromwell, and the early Virginia colonies.

There are an alarming number of undetonated World War II bombs around the world. In 2012, around 1,000 popped up on Mapleton Beach in England. Fortunately they were successfully disarmed.

Do you hate massive bugs? Well unfortunately for you, the ocean is full of them, including multiple species of giant isopods. However, they mostly reside on the frigid ocean floor.

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