Anon. "Sea Monster is Captured," The Calgary Daily Herald (24 August 1937)

The monster taken at Fortune Bay was still unidentified two days after it was killed in a 48-hour battle against fishermen's guns and harpoons, and was lying lashed to Capt. Earl Noble's motor vessel Golda awaiting an offer of purchase.
If no museum or institution buys the huge carcass, its nine-inch deep coat of fat will be fried into oil.
The exact length of the creature is 34 feet. It is finless, but has several pairs of four-foot long flippers. Its tail is nine feet in extreme width; while the mouth, three feet, eight inches across, extends nine feet from the tip of the snouth.
The immense fish differs greatly from any whales frequenting Newfoundland waters, and does not fit descriptions of any known fish.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Schafer, Louis S. "The Deepstar 4000," The Compass: A Magazine of the Sea, Vol. 56, No. 1 (1986)

Anstruther, Robert H. "A Strange Sea Reptile," The Spectactor (4 March 1922)

Ogilvie-Grant, William Russell, "The Expedition of the British Ornithologists' Union to the Snow Mountains of New Guinea: Part VI, The Discovery of a Pigmy Race," Country Life, Vol. 27, No. 700 (4 June 1910)