Hellbound
Merchant of Doom
Well, it has been classically used by various cryptidites (probably not a word!) like bigfooters. X% amount of the woods are unexplored, so it could be out there!
Obviously when dealing with woods the percentage is way less likely to be a real unexplored % than with the oceans. But that does not make the argument any more logical. The actual claim. There are various very good reasons why we know this creature very likely does not exist anymore in our oceans.
Let me give you a few more common examples for comparison:
"Our oceans remain 95% unexplored, a Plesiosaur could very well be living in there!"
"Our oceans remain 95% unexplored, our undiscovered distant relatives the aqua-men could very well be living in there!"
"Our oceans remain 95% unexplored, space aliens could very well be hiding in there!"
(That last one is probably more likely than Megalodon, surprisingly!)
The "our oceans remain 95% unexplored" is not only a distraction, it is a hook that rubs the "anything is possible" crowd exactly how they want to be rubbed.
Just to add to this, it's also a mostly irrelevent statistic for another reason: the majority of the ocean is wet desert. Most of the animal species are along coasts, with some exceptions. But even those exceptions tend to be in limited areas (geothermal vents, for example). Of that 95% unexplored, there's simply not enough stuff living there to support the existence of any large predator.
ETA: Not to mention that a good portion of that unexplored area is also the parts at extreme depths and pressures, where something like Megaladon could not survive. Just an off-the-cuff guess, but I'd suspect that the truth would show that we have explored about 95% of the parts of the ocean where a megaladon might reasonably be expected to exist. If it did exist somewhere else, there'd need to be some extraordinary convergence of conveniences and coincidences (think "Dan Brown novel"
So the actual statistic may be correct, but it's the context it's used in that makes it woo.
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