Could a Mosasaurus destroy a ship?
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Would a fictional relative of a Mosasaurus, the fictional one being a tad bit bigger, be capable of destroying a ship?
For the purposes of this question, assume a wooden ship of comparable size and construction to medieval cogs, hulks or galleys. The reason being they fill the role of leviathan in my world.
reality-check sea-creatures
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up vote
6
down vote
favorite
Would a fictional relative of a Mosasaurus, the fictional one being a tad bit bigger, be capable of destroying a ship?
For the purposes of this question, assume a wooden ship of comparable size and construction to medieval cogs, hulks or galleys. The reason being they fill the role of leviathan in my world.
reality-check sea-creatures
Has Ark flashbacks.
– Celestial Dragon Emperor
Sep 2 at 13:26
Possible duplicate of this question, if not a duplicate could certainly be of interest.
– adaliabooks
Sep 2 at 19:21
You may also be interested in pliosaurs, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pliosauroidea
– John
Sep 2 at 22:20
add a comment |Â
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
Would a fictional relative of a Mosasaurus, the fictional one being a tad bit bigger, be capable of destroying a ship?
For the purposes of this question, assume a wooden ship of comparable size and construction to medieval cogs, hulks or galleys. The reason being they fill the role of leviathan in my world.
reality-check sea-creatures
Would a fictional relative of a Mosasaurus, the fictional one being a tad bit bigger, be capable of destroying a ship?
For the purposes of this question, assume a wooden ship of comparable size and construction to medieval cogs, hulks or galleys. The reason being they fill the role of leviathan in my world.
reality-check sea-creatures
edited Sep 3 at 0:22
Brythan
19.5k74182
19.5k74182
asked Sep 2 at 13:15
The Imperial
5269
5269
Has Ark flashbacks.
– Celestial Dragon Emperor
Sep 2 at 13:26
Possible duplicate of this question, if not a duplicate could certainly be of interest.
– adaliabooks
Sep 2 at 19:21
You may also be interested in pliosaurs, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pliosauroidea
– John
Sep 2 at 22:20
add a comment |Â
Has Ark flashbacks.
– Celestial Dragon Emperor
Sep 2 at 13:26
Possible duplicate of this question, if not a duplicate could certainly be of interest.
– adaliabooks
Sep 2 at 19:21
You may also be interested in pliosaurs, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pliosauroidea
– John
Sep 2 at 22:20
Has Ark flashbacks.
– Celestial Dragon Emperor
Sep 2 at 13:26
Has Ark flashbacks.
– Celestial Dragon Emperor
Sep 2 at 13:26
Possible duplicate of this question, if not a duplicate could certainly be of interest.
– adaliabooks
Sep 2 at 19:21
Possible duplicate of this question, if not a duplicate could certainly be of interest.
– adaliabooks
Sep 2 at 19:21
You may also be interested in pliosaurs, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pliosauroidea
– John
Sep 2 at 22:20
You may also be interested in pliosaurs, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pliosauroidea
– John
Sep 2 at 22:20
add a comment |Â
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
up vote
9
down vote
Yes it can.
A Mosasaur is roughly around 50ft long (comparable to a humpback whale) and from what I can tell more durable and probably much more aggressive.
Whales can already sink sizeable wooden ships. Here's an example: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essex_(whaleship)
Now you could have your Mosasaur be slightly bigger for effect, but also maybe have its forehead be bigger and thicker for ramming into ships.
add a comment |Â
up vote
7
down vote
Mosasaurus could reach up to 17 meters length. For reference, that is the average length of sperm whales.
If we look at sperm whales, there are accounts of 26 meters sperm whales sinking 19th century whaling ships.
The whale rammed Essex, rocking her from side to side, and then dived under her, surfacing close on the ship's starboard side. As its head lay alongside the bow and the tail by the stern, it was motionless and appeared to be stunned. Chase prepared to harpoon it from the deck when he realized that its tail was only inches from the rudder, which the whale could easily destroy if provoked by an attempt to kill it. Fearing to leave the ship stuck thousands of miles from land with no way to steer it, Chase hesitated. The whale recovered, swam several hundred yards forward of the ship, and turned to face the ship's bow. The whale crushed the bow, driving the vessel backward, and then finally disengaged its head from the shattered timbers and swam off, never to be seen again, leaving Essex quickly going down by the bow.
Now, considering that middle age ships were less robust than 19th century ships, and that your creature is larger than a Mosasaurus, it's possible that the task can be completed.
Even though Owen Chase estimated the whale was 85 feet long, and got a good look at it when it was resting right beside the Essex, many modern skeptics doubt it was that long. But there is no doubt that a sperm whale rammed and sank the Essex, and that other sperm whales with more normal estimated sizes rammed and sank other whaling ships. It did happen. Procopius mentioned a 6th century sea monster that sank ships in the Sea of Marmara over a 50 year period.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 15:54
A mosasaurus would have a much MUCH easier time ripping a rudder off a ship. they can do the crocodile bite and roll.
– John
Sep 2 at 22:19
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
This is an adult humpback whale breaching. It's easily reaching over 4 meters in the air.
This is a full size reproduction of a 15th Century or so ship.
You'll note, based on the size of the people visible, that the amidships freeboard is not 4 meters. Thirty or more tons of live whale crashing down in the middle of the ship would probably not be conducive to the structural integrity of the ship.
If your "leviathans" were at least as capable of breaching as a large whale, they could probably snap a cog or early galley in half. Later vessels could likely survive the impact, but would be heavily damaged. If they were ambush predators similar to Great Whites and hunted larger prey like whale by striking from below, this sort of thing might be even more likely.
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
In the example of the Essex (from the answers by Celestial Dragon Emperor and L.Dutch), a sperm whale rammed a ship. I guess that hurt the whale, but it seemed upset enough to risk that. The mosasaurus has a different skull and jaw. I guess it would try to bite the ship, not ram it, even if the skull is called "robust" by wikipedia.
If the mosasaurus bites a wooden ship, would it try to tear a piece out of the hull or would it spit it out and look for more tasty prey? Depends on the intelligence you are giving it -- too stupid to realize the ship is not edible or smart enough to realize there are tasty morsels inside?
1
I have collected a number of accounts of ships sunk by whales, sometimes through accidental collisions. There are one or two accounts of whales allegedly bashing the ships with their tails and one of a whale that allegedly leaped before it looked and landed on the deck of the doomed ship. So there might be several methods a mosasaurus could use. I'm sure that a mosasaurus could bite a tiny open rowboat in half, sperm whales often did so, but I don't know if a mosasaurus could bite a ship sinking hole in a wooden ship.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 16:04
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
As noted in other answers, Mosasaurs were as large as modern Sperm whales, and likely as aggressive, their body shape is probably not as conducive to ramming attacks as the blunt head of a sperm whale.
However, especially given the sort of technology of the ships described, the Mosasaur could easily snap the oars of a galley, or the steering oars of round ships, rendering the ship helpless in the water. Rearing out of the water would also allow the Mosasaur to snatch crew members from the deck, and if it fall on the deck it would also likely stove in the side of the ship.
add a comment |Â
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
9
down vote
Yes it can.
A Mosasaur is roughly around 50ft long (comparable to a humpback whale) and from what I can tell more durable and probably much more aggressive.
Whales can already sink sizeable wooden ships. Here's an example: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essex_(whaleship)
Now you could have your Mosasaur be slightly bigger for effect, but also maybe have its forehead be bigger and thicker for ramming into ships.
add a comment |Â
up vote
9
down vote
Yes it can.
A Mosasaur is roughly around 50ft long (comparable to a humpback whale) and from what I can tell more durable and probably much more aggressive.
Whales can already sink sizeable wooden ships. Here's an example: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essex_(whaleship)
Now you could have your Mosasaur be slightly bigger for effect, but also maybe have its forehead be bigger and thicker for ramming into ships.
add a comment |Â
up vote
9
down vote
up vote
9
down vote
Yes it can.
A Mosasaur is roughly around 50ft long (comparable to a humpback whale) and from what I can tell more durable and probably much more aggressive.
Whales can already sink sizeable wooden ships. Here's an example: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essex_(whaleship)
Now you could have your Mosasaur be slightly bigger for effect, but also maybe have its forehead be bigger and thicker for ramming into ships.
Yes it can.
A Mosasaur is roughly around 50ft long (comparable to a humpback whale) and from what I can tell more durable and probably much more aggressive.
Whales can already sink sizeable wooden ships. Here's an example: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essex_(whaleship)
Now you could have your Mosasaur be slightly bigger for effect, but also maybe have its forehead be bigger and thicker for ramming into ships.
edited Sep 3 at 0:22
Brythan
19.5k74182
19.5k74182
answered Sep 2 at 13:33


Celestial Dragon Emperor
1,0891622
1,0891622
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
up vote
7
down vote
Mosasaurus could reach up to 17 meters length. For reference, that is the average length of sperm whales.
If we look at sperm whales, there are accounts of 26 meters sperm whales sinking 19th century whaling ships.
The whale rammed Essex, rocking her from side to side, and then dived under her, surfacing close on the ship's starboard side. As its head lay alongside the bow and the tail by the stern, it was motionless and appeared to be stunned. Chase prepared to harpoon it from the deck when he realized that its tail was only inches from the rudder, which the whale could easily destroy if provoked by an attempt to kill it. Fearing to leave the ship stuck thousands of miles from land with no way to steer it, Chase hesitated. The whale recovered, swam several hundred yards forward of the ship, and turned to face the ship's bow. The whale crushed the bow, driving the vessel backward, and then finally disengaged its head from the shattered timbers and swam off, never to be seen again, leaving Essex quickly going down by the bow.
Now, considering that middle age ships were less robust than 19th century ships, and that your creature is larger than a Mosasaurus, it's possible that the task can be completed.
Even though Owen Chase estimated the whale was 85 feet long, and got a good look at it when it was resting right beside the Essex, many modern skeptics doubt it was that long. But there is no doubt that a sperm whale rammed and sank the Essex, and that other sperm whales with more normal estimated sizes rammed and sank other whaling ships. It did happen. Procopius mentioned a 6th century sea monster that sank ships in the Sea of Marmara over a 50 year period.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 15:54
A mosasaurus would have a much MUCH easier time ripping a rudder off a ship. they can do the crocodile bite and roll.
– John
Sep 2 at 22:19
add a comment |Â
up vote
7
down vote
Mosasaurus could reach up to 17 meters length. For reference, that is the average length of sperm whales.
If we look at sperm whales, there are accounts of 26 meters sperm whales sinking 19th century whaling ships.
The whale rammed Essex, rocking her from side to side, and then dived under her, surfacing close on the ship's starboard side. As its head lay alongside the bow and the tail by the stern, it was motionless and appeared to be stunned. Chase prepared to harpoon it from the deck when he realized that its tail was only inches from the rudder, which the whale could easily destroy if provoked by an attempt to kill it. Fearing to leave the ship stuck thousands of miles from land with no way to steer it, Chase hesitated. The whale recovered, swam several hundred yards forward of the ship, and turned to face the ship's bow. The whale crushed the bow, driving the vessel backward, and then finally disengaged its head from the shattered timbers and swam off, never to be seen again, leaving Essex quickly going down by the bow.
Now, considering that middle age ships were less robust than 19th century ships, and that your creature is larger than a Mosasaurus, it's possible that the task can be completed.
Even though Owen Chase estimated the whale was 85 feet long, and got a good look at it when it was resting right beside the Essex, many modern skeptics doubt it was that long. But there is no doubt that a sperm whale rammed and sank the Essex, and that other sperm whales with more normal estimated sizes rammed and sank other whaling ships. It did happen. Procopius mentioned a 6th century sea monster that sank ships in the Sea of Marmara over a 50 year period.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 15:54
A mosasaurus would have a much MUCH easier time ripping a rudder off a ship. they can do the crocodile bite and roll.
– John
Sep 2 at 22:19
add a comment |Â
up vote
7
down vote
up vote
7
down vote
Mosasaurus could reach up to 17 meters length. For reference, that is the average length of sperm whales.
If we look at sperm whales, there are accounts of 26 meters sperm whales sinking 19th century whaling ships.
The whale rammed Essex, rocking her from side to side, and then dived under her, surfacing close on the ship's starboard side. As its head lay alongside the bow and the tail by the stern, it was motionless and appeared to be stunned. Chase prepared to harpoon it from the deck when he realized that its tail was only inches from the rudder, which the whale could easily destroy if provoked by an attempt to kill it. Fearing to leave the ship stuck thousands of miles from land with no way to steer it, Chase hesitated. The whale recovered, swam several hundred yards forward of the ship, and turned to face the ship's bow. The whale crushed the bow, driving the vessel backward, and then finally disengaged its head from the shattered timbers and swam off, never to be seen again, leaving Essex quickly going down by the bow.
Now, considering that middle age ships were less robust than 19th century ships, and that your creature is larger than a Mosasaurus, it's possible that the task can be completed.
Mosasaurus could reach up to 17 meters length. For reference, that is the average length of sperm whales.
If we look at sperm whales, there are accounts of 26 meters sperm whales sinking 19th century whaling ships.
The whale rammed Essex, rocking her from side to side, and then dived under her, surfacing close on the ship's starboard side. As its head lay alongside the bow and the tail by the stern, it was motionless and appeared to be stunned. Chase prepared to harpoon it from the deck when he realized that its tail was only inches from the rudder, which the whale could easily destroy if provoked by an attempt to kill it. Fearing to leave the ship stuck thousands of miles from land with no way to steer it, Chase hesitated. The whale recovered, swam several hundred yards forward of the ship, and turned to face the ship's bow. The whale crushed the bow, driving the vessel backward, and then finally disengaged its head from the shattered timbers and swam off, never to be seen again, leaving Essex quickly going down by the bow.
Now, considering that middle age ships were less robust than 19th century ships, and that your creature is larger than a Mosasaurus, it's possible that the task can be completed.
answered Sep 2 at 13:33


L.Dutch♦
61.7k18144288
61.7k18144288
Even though Owen Chase estimated the whale was 85 feet long, and got a good look at it when it was resting right beside the Essex, many modern skeptics doubt it was that long. But there is no doubt that a sperm whale rammed and sank the Essex, and that other sperm whales with more normal estimated sizes rammed and sank other whaling ships. It did happen. Procopius mentioned a 6th century sea monster that sank ships in the Sea of Marmara over a 50 year period.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 15:54
A mosasaurus would have a much MUCH easier time ripping a rudder off a ship. they can do the crocodile bite and roll.
– John
Sep 2 at 22:19
add a comment |Â
Even though Owen Chase estimated the whale was 85 feet long, and got a good look at it when it was resting right beside the Essex, many modern skeptics doubt it was that long. But there is no doubt that a sperm whale rammed and sank the Essex, and that other sperm whales with more normal estimated sizes rammed and sank other whaling ships. It did happen. Procopius mentioned a 6th century sea monster that sank ships in the Sea of Marmara over a 50 year period.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 15:54
A mosasaurus would have a much MUCH easier time ripping a rudder off a ship. they can do the crocodile bite and roll.
– John
Sep 2 at 22:19
Even though Owen Chase estimated the whale was 85 feet long, and got a good look at it when it was resting right beside the Essex, many modern skeptics doubt it was that long. But there is no doubt that a sperm whale rammed and sank the Essex, and that other sperm whales with more normal estimated sizes rammed and sank other whaling ships. It did happen. Procopius mentioned a 6th century sea monster that sank ships in the Sea of Marmara over a 50 year period.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 15:54
Even though Owen Chase estimated the whale was 85 feet long, and got a good look at it when it was resting right beside the Essex, many modern skeptics doubt it was that long. But there is no doubt that a sperm whale rammed and sank the Essex, and that other sperm whales with more normal estimated sizes rammed and sank other whaling ships. It did happen. Procopius mentioned a 6th century sea monster that sank ships in the Sea of Marmara over a 50 year period.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 15:54
A mosasaurus would have a much MUCH easier time ripping a rudder off a ship. they can do the crocodile bite and roll.
– John
Sep 2 at 22:19
A mosasaurus would have a much MUCH easier time ripping a rudder off a ship. they can do the crocodile bite and roll.
– John
Sep 2 at 22:19
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
This is an adult humpback whale breaching. It's easily reaching over 4 meters in the air.
This is a full size reproduction of a 15th Century or so ship.
You'll note, based on the size of the people visible, that the amidships freeboard is not 4 meters. Thirty or more tons of live whale crashing down in the middle of the ship would probably not be conducive to the structural integrity of the ship.
If your "leviathans" were at least as capable of breaching as a large whale, they could probably snap a cog or early galley in half. Later vessels could likely survive the impact, but would be heavily damaged. If they were ambush predators similar to Great Whites and hunted larger prey like whale by striking from below, this sort of thing might be even more likely.
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
This is an adult humpback whale breaching. It's easily reaching over 4 meters in the air.
This is a full size reproduction of a 15th Century or so ship.
You'll note, based on the size of the people visible, that the amidships freeboard is not 4 meters. Thirty or more tons of live whale crashing down in the middle of the ship would probably not be conducive to the structural integrity of the ship.
If your "leviathans" were at least as capable of breaching as a large whale, they could probably snap a cog or early galley in half. Later vessels could likely survive the impact, but would be heavily damaged. If they were ambush predators similar to Great Whites and hunted larger prey like whale by striking from below, this sort of thing might be even more likely.
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
This is an adult humpback whale breaching. It's easily reaching over 4 meters in the air.
This is a full size reproduction of a 15th Century or so ship.
You'll note, based on the size of the people visible, that the amidships freeboard is not 4 meters. Thirty or more tons of live whale crashing down in the middle of the ship would probably not be conducive to the structural integrity of the ship.
If your "leviathans" were at least as capable of breaching as a large whale, they could probably snap a cog or early galley in half. Later vessels could likely survive the impact, but would be heavily damaged. If they were ambush predators similar to Great Whites and hunted larger prey like whale by striking from below, this sort of thing might be even more likely.
This is an adult humpback whale breaching. It's easily reaching over 4 meters in the air.
This is a full size reproduction of a 15th Century or so ship.
You'll note, based on the size of the people visible, that the amidships freeboard is not 4 meters. Thirty or more tons of live whale crashing down in the middle of the ship would probably not be conducive to the structural integrity of the ship.
If your "leviathans" were at least as capable of breaching as a large whale, they could probably snap a cog or early galley in half. Later vessels could likely survive the impact, but would be heavily damaged. If they were ambush predators similar to Great Whites and hunted larger prey like whale by striking from below, this sort of thing might be even more likely.
answered Sep 2 at 21:50
Keith Morrison
4,1581717
4,1581717
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
In the example of the Essex (from the answers by Celestial Dragon Emperor and L.Dutch), a sperm whale rammed a ship. I guess that hurt the whale, but it seemed upset enough to risk that. The mosasaurus has a different skull and jaw. I guess it would try to bite the ship, not ram it, even if the skull is called "robust" by wikipedia.
If the mosasaurus bites a wooden ship, would it try to tear a piece out of the hull or would it spit it out and look for more tasty prey? Depends on the intelligence you are giving it -- too stupid to realize the ship is not edible or smart enough to realize there are tasty morsels inside?
1
I have collected a number of accounts of ships sunk by whales, sometimes through accidental collisions. There are one or two accounts of whales allegedly bashing the ships with their tails and one of a whale that allegedly leaped before it looked and landed on the deck of the doomed ship. So there might be several methods a mosasaurus could use. I'm sure that a mosasaurus could bite a tiny open rowboat in half, sperm whales often did so, but I don't know if a mosasaurus could bite a ship sinking hole in a wooden ship.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 16:04
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
In the example of the Essex (from the answers by Celestial Dragon Emperor and L.Dutch), a sperm whale rammed a ship. I guess that hurt the whale, but it seemed upset enough to risk that. The mosasaurus has a different skull and jaw. I guess it would try to bite the ship, not ram it, even if the skull is called "robust" by wikipedia.
If the mosasaurus bites a wooden ship, would it try to tear a piece out of the hull or would it spit it out and look for more tasty prey? Depends on the intelligence you are giving it -- too stupid to realize the ship is not edible or smart enough to realize there are tasty morsels inside?
1
I have collected a number of accounts of ships sunk by whales, sometimes through accidental collisions. There are one or two accounts of whales allegedly bashing the ships with their tails and one of a whale that allegedly leaped before it looked and landed on the deck of the doomed ship. So there might be several methods a mosasaurus could use. I'm sure that a mosasaurus could bite a tiny open rowboat in half, sperm whales often did so, but I don't know if a mosasaurus could bite a ship sinking hole in a wooden ship.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 16:04
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
In the example of the Essex (from the answers by Celestial Dragon Emperor and L.Dutch), a sperm whale rammed a ship. I guess that hurt the whale, but it seemed upset enough to risk that. The mosasaurus has a different skull and jaw. I guess it would try to bite the ship, not ram it, even if the skull is called "robust" by wikipedia.
If the mosasaurus bites a wooden ship, would it try to tear a piece out of the hull or would it spit it out and look for more tasty prey? Depends on the intelligence you are giving it -- too stupid to realize the ship is not edible or smart enough to realize there are tasty morsels inside?
In the example of the Essex (from the answers by Celestial Dragon Emperor and L.Dutch), a sperm whale rammed a ship. I guess that hurt the whale, but it seemed upset enough to risk that. The mosasaurus has a different skull and jaw. I guess it would try to bite the ship, not ram it, even if the skull is called "robust" by wikipedia.
If the mosasaurus bites a wooden ship, would it try to tear a piece out of the hull or would it spit it out and look for more tasty prey? Depends on the intelligence you are giving it -- too stupid to realize the ship is not edible or smart enough to realize there are tasty morsels inside?
answered Sep 2 at 14:06
o.m.
54.3k677181
54.3k677181
1
I have collected a number of accounts of ships sunk by whales, sometimes through accidental collisions. There are one or two accounts of whales allegedly bashing the ships with their tails and one of a whale that allegedly leaped before it looked and landed on the deck of the doomed ship. So there might be several methods a mosasaurus could use. I'm sure that a mosasaurus could bite a tiny open rowboat in half, sperm whales often did so, but I don't know if a mosasaurus could bite a ship sinking hole in a wooden ship.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 16:04
add a comment |Â
1
I have collected a number of accounts of ships sunk by whales, sometimes through accidental collisions. There are one or two accounts of whales allegedly bashing the ships with their tails and one of a whale that allegedly leaped before it looked and landed on the deck of the doomed ship. So there might be several methods a mosasaurus could use. I'm sure that a mosasaurus could bite a tiny open rowboat in half, sperm whales often did so, but I don't know if a mosasaurus could bite a ship sinking hole in a wooden ship.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 16:04
1
1
I have collected a number of accounts of ships sunk by whales, sometimes through accidental collisions. There are one or two accounts of whales allegedly bashing the ships with their tails and one of a whale that allegedly leaped before it looked and landed on the deck of the doomed ship. So there might be several methods a mosasaurus could use. I'm sure that a mosasaurus could bite a tiny open rowboat in half, sperm whales often did so, but I don't know if a mosasaurus could bite a ship sinking hole in a wooden ship.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 16:04
I have collected a number of accounts of ships sunk by whales, sometimes through accidental collisions. There are one or two accounts of whales allegedly bashing the ships with their tails and one of a whale that allegedly leaped before it looked and landed on the deck of the doomed ship. So there might be several methods a mosasaurus could use. I'm sure that a mosasaurus could bite a tiny open rowboat in half, sperm whales often did so, but I don't know if a mosasaurus could bite a ship sinking hole in a wooden ship.
– M. A. Golding
Sep 2 at 16:04
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
As noted in other answers, Mosasaurs were as large as modern Sperm whales, and likely as aggressive, their body shape is probably not as conducive to ramming attacks as the blunt head of a sperm whale.
However, especially given the sort of technology of the ships described, the Mosasaur could easily snap the oars of a galley, or the steering oars of round ships, rendering the ship helpless in the water. Rearing out of the water would also allow the Mosasaur to snatch crew members from the deck, and if it fall on the deck it would also likely stove in the side of the ship.
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
As noted in other answers, Mosasaurs were as large as modern Sperm whales, and likely as aggressive, their body shape is probably not as conducive to ramming attacks as the blunt head of a sperm whale.
However, especially given the sort of technology of the ships described, the Mosasaur could easily snap the oars of a galley, or the steering oars of round ships, rendering the ship helpless in the water. Rearing out of the water would also allow the Mosasaur to snatch crew members from the deck, and if it fall on the deck it would also likely stove in the side of the ship.
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
As noted in other answers, Mosasaurs were as large as modern Sperm whales, and likely as aggressive, their body shape is probably not as conducive to ramming attacks as the blunt head of a sperm whale.
However, especially given the sort of technology of the ships described, the Mosasaur could easily snap the oars of a galley, or the steering oars of round ships, rendering the ship helpless in the water. Rearing out of the water would also allow the Mosasaur to snatch crew members from the deck, and if it fall on the deck it would also likely stove in the side of the ship.
As noted in other answers, Mosasaurs were as large as modern Sperm whales, and likely as aggressive, their body shape is probably not as conducive to ramming attacks as the blunt head of a sperm whale.
However, especially given the sort of technology of the ships described, the Mosasaur could easily snap the oars of a galley, or the steering oars of round ships, rendering the ship helpless in the water. Rearing out of the water would also allow the Mosasaur to snatch crew members from the deck, and if it fall on the deck it would also likely stove in the side of the ship.
answered Sep 2 at 16:15
Thucydides
76.9k674225
76.9k674225
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
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Has Ark flashbacks.
– Celestial Dragon Emperor
Sep 2 at 13:26
Possible duplicate of this question, if not a duplicate could certainly be of interest.
– adaliabooks
Sep 2 at 19:21
You may also be interested in pliosaurs, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pliosauroidea
– John
Sep 2 at 22:20