A 3.3-metre oarfish — an elusive deepsea creature shaped like an eel — washed up earlier this month in California. Also known as a "doomsday fish," this is the third one to wash ashore in as many ...
In Japanese mythology, the deep-sea-dwelling oarfish is a harbinger of impending disaster. For scientists in California, where three oarfish have washed up in recent months, it’s an exciting find.
While Japanese folklore links oarfish sightings to earthquakes, scientists say there is no scientific evidence to support this claim. The Scripps Institution of Oceanography will study the oarfish ...
"Sometimes it may be linked to broader shifts such as the El Niño and La Niña cycle but this is not always the case." In Japan, the oarfish is steeped in folklore. Known locally as “Ryugu no Tsuki” or ...
Oarfish have been found around the globe, but one particular country's history with the fish has gathered the most attention: Japan. Researchers in Japan looked into this in 2019: "In Japan ...
Japanese mythology attributes shallow-water appearances of the deep-sea oarfish as precursors to earthquakes and tsunamis, according to Atlas Obscura. In 2010, at least a dozen were reported on ...
Oarfish, scientifically called Regalecus glesne, is considered to be associated with doomsday or, more specifically, earthquakes. This link is grounded in Japanese mythology, for which the oarfish ...