Many-finned sea serpent
Grouping | Cryptid |
---|---|
Sub grouping | Sea monster |
Similar creatures | Archaeocete (Heuvelmans), Polychaete worm (Bradshaw), Myriapod (Woodley and Shuker), Isopod (Shuker) |
Other name(s) | Cetacean Centipede, Con rit, Great Sea-Centipede |
Habitat | Tropical/Subtropical Waters |
The many-finned sea serpent is an unverified species or group of species of marine animals which seem to possess numerous fins along their sides or backs. The creatures are supposedly capable of growing to enormous lengths; around 45 m for one such creature sighted near Algeria. In his book, On the Nature of Animals (second century CE), Greek military writer Aelian reported that these sea serpents were known to beach themselves. He also reported that witnesses had described such creatures as having lobster-like tails and large nostrils with hair.
Alternative names
Zoologist Bernard Heuvelmans called this cryptid the "Many-finned" type in his general classification of sea serpents, and gave it the "scientific" name of Cetioscolopendra aeliana. In the sixteenth century, the creatures had been referred to as "cetacean centipedes" by Guillaume Rondelet. Even earlier, Aelian dubbed the animals the "Great Sea-Centipedes". Author Loren Coleman used nearly the same term (Great Sea Centipede) to describe these animals in his book The Field Guide to Lake Monsters, Sea Serpents, and other Mystery Denizens of the Deep. In Vietnam, such creatures are called "Con rit", which is Vietnamese for "centipede".
Sightings
In 1883, a dead specimen of an armored sea serpent was supposedly observed on a beach in Hongay, Along Bay, Vietnam. Witness Tran Van Con claimed that the carcass was 18 meters long, and was covered with 60-cm armored segments throughout its length. Attached to each segment was a pair of filament-like structures, each of them being 70 cm long. The body was dark brown above, and light yellow on its underside. The headless carcass was later towed out to sea. The alleged incident was reported 38 years after the fact to Dr. A. Krempf.
In 1899, the ship HMS Narcissus was traveling near Cape Falcon, Algeria, when the sailors aboard sighted a "sea monster". Estimated at 45 meters in length, the animal possessed an "immense number of fins", which propelled it through the water with enough speed to keep pace with the ship. The creature was observed for 30 minutes.
Possible identity
Bernard Heuvelmans theorized that such animals were armored basilosaurs, and pointed out that ancient whale fossils had been known to possess bony dermal plaques. However, such plaques present in association with whale fossils are now known to come from other species. Thus, there is no evidence that armored basilosaurs ever existed.
Ecologist and cryptozoologist Michael A. Woodley suggested in In the Wake of Bernard Heuvelmans that the evidence points towards an invertebrate rather than a cetacean identity, and has speculated that the con-rit might be a fully aquatic descendent of the giant myriapod Arthropleura, which became extinct at the beginning of the Permian period. He has also suggested an alternative to Heuvelman's original binomial name for it in the form of Mariascolpendra aelani (Woodley, 2007), which translates as 'Aelian's sea centipede'.
See also
References
- Coleman, Loren and Huyghe, Patrick (2003). The Field Guide to Lake Monsters, Sea Serpents, and other Mystery Denizens of the Deep. NY: Tarcher-Penguin
- Heuvelmans, Bernard (1968). In the Wake of the Sea-Serpents (2nd edition). NY: Hil and Wang
- Woodley, Michael Anthony (2008). In the Wake of Bernard Heuvelmans: An Introduction to the History and Future of Sea Serpent Classification. Bideford: Centre for Fortean Zoology Press.