WASHINGTON: One of the world’s rarest creatures has been sighted for just the third time near Papua New Guinea by an American biologist. Peter Ward, a biology professor at the University of Washington has spotted Allonautilus Scrobilatus 30 years after the species was first spotted.
The sea creature which has outlived the dinosaurs and surpassed two major extinctions were only seen by two individuals worldwide, making it one of the rarest species to live on our planet.
Ward first spotted Allonautilus Scrobilatus in 1984 along with his colleague Bruce Saunders. The creature looked similar to the Nautilus Pompilius species, but it was later found that it was an entirely new species in the Nautilus family.
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