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BTW: there are several known forms of giant squid and jellyfish, by measurements, the only large enough to eat a collosul squid is the sperm whale.
And my personal opinion: in the deepest unexplored regions of the ocean, pressure is massive, anything no small, or not big, enough is crushed by its own weight, if we assume that collosul squid are the general size range for these (as would be suggested by giant jellyfish) there may well be many spaces of "giant" animals down there, whO's to say the myth of sea serpents wasnt created when seismic activity drove one such creature to the surface ( most likely in q "bubble" of deep water (like a goldfish bag) technicLly, it would explode frOm the lack of pressure, but if it's scales are light enough it wouldnt. Snake comes up, eats a sailer or fifty, goes back down. Survivors tell stories of q giant snake monster.
/stupid theorie.
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