A dead oarfish spotted along the Southern California coast marks the state's third sighting of the so-called "doomsday fish" ...
It was California’s third spotting of the species in the last three months and only the 22nd over the past century.
A rare fish, regarded as a harbinger of doom, has washed up on the shore of Encinitas in southern California. It is the ...
The discovery of the dead 9½-foot-long fish follows a similar find by kayakers and snorkelers in August at La Jolla Cove ...
Considered to be the origin of the sea serpent tale, giant oarfish are a species yet to be largely researched by scientists.
The doomsday fish got its name because it looks like a mythical sea creature, with a long, ribbon-shaped body that can grow ...
A rare, massive fish known as the harbinger of doom has washed up on a California shore — for the second time in just three ...
A rare deep-sea oarfish has washed up in California, the third to do so in a few months and only the 22nd since 1901.
The doomsday fish got its name because it looks like a mythical sea creature, with a long, ribbon-shaped body that can grow ...
Another oarfish has made its way from the deep sea to the coast of San Diego County in Southern California. Scripps ...
This month's sighting was only the 21st time the fish has been documented to have washed up in California since 1901, according to the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.