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frogman visiting New Zealand ’s south seashore of Wellington were looking for a nice billet to go spearfishing Saturday morning ( Aug. 25 ) when they spotted one of the ocean ’s most impressive creatures of the deep : a beat , but fully integral , giant squid .

" After we went for a dive we last back to [ the calamary ] and got a tape measurement out , and it measured 4.2 meters [ 13 foot ] long , " one of the frogman , Daniel Aplin , order theNew Zealand Herald .

squid

These divers were easily dwarfed by the giant squid they found.

A representative from the New Zealand Department of Conservation tell the Herald that the diver most likely establish agiant squid ( Architeuthis dux)and not acolossal squid ( Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni ) . [ Photos of the Stunning Deep - Sea Squid Feeding ]

Both species of squid are formidable sea creatures , with giant squid typically reaching 16 feet ( 5 thou ) long , harmonize to the Smithsonian , and the colossal squid reach over 30 feet ( 10 m ) long , agree to the International Union for Conservation of Nature .

scientist know very little about these thick - sea - dwelling house species , because the animals are so seldom seen . Most observation total from the occasional specimenwashing ashore , as in this case , or getting accidently captured by pekan .

Frame taken from the video captured of the baby Colossal squid swimming.

Theenormous tentacled creature’scause of death is unknown . Aplin told the Herald that the squid appear whole except for a scratch that was so tiny that the diver " would n’t think that ’s what killed it . " When the divers control the calamary out again after their diva , they thought it had shrunk a little , but no animals had decided to make a meal out of the dead animal , Aplin say .

He anticipate a friend from New Zealand ’s National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research ( NIWA ) who set up for the calamari to be collect , the Herald report .

Aplin is an employee ofOcean Hunter Spearfishing & Freediving Specialists , and posted his photos of the elephantine calamari on the company’sFacebook Thomas Nelson Page , which fire a wealth of commentary . " opine that swimming yesteryear ! " wrote one commenter . " Who ’s up for calamari ? " wrote another .

A photograph of a newly discovered mosasaur fossil in a human hand.

Original article onLive scientific discipline .

A large deep sea spider crawls across the ocean floor

The oddity of an octopus riding a shark.

an illustration of a shark being eaten by an even larger shark

An orange sea pig in gloved hands.

A rainbow colored squid in the dark ocean

Screengrab from a video of a bigfin squid at the bottom of the Tonga Trench. The squid�s long arms are outstretched and its fins fanned out.

Deep-sea squid brooding its eggs

Two images; red squid with two bright green tips at the end of their arms (left), red squid wraps arms around underwater camera (right).

A squid swims in black waters with thousands of eggs suspended from its arms.

An image comparing the relative sizes of our solar system�s known dwarf planets, including the newly discovered 2017 OF201

a view of a tomb with scaffolding on it

an illustration showing a large disk of material around a star

A small phallic stalagmite is encircled by a 500-year-old bracelet carved from shell with Maya-like imagery

a person holds a GLP-1 injector

A man with light skin and dark hair and beard leans back in a wooden boat, rowing with oars into the sea

an abstract illustration depicting the collision of subatomic particles