gr3ys-d1ce - Sharkt :3
Sharkt :3

Hello just on here havin fun :3

21 posts

It's 3am And I Just Got The Intense Urge To Pull Out My Teeth With Pliers, Worm #cutesy #quirky #demure

It's 3am and I just got the intense urge to pull out my teeth with pliers, worm #cutesy #quirky #demure #mindful

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More Posts from Gr3ys-d1ce

10 months ago

BEYOU BLAHAJJ>>>

Sharks Are Ally's Now!
Sharks Are Ally's Now!

Sharks are 🏳️‍⚧️ ally's now! 🦈🦈🦈

Sharks Are Ally's Now!

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8 months ago
Bros A Father
Bros A Father

bros a father

their names are listed below if anyone cares :3

Big- Grey

Purple- Mango

Pink- Smile dip

Light blue- double whammy

Dark blue- deep sea creature


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8 months ago

Are you ever just super super dizzy at night and your waving all around desperately trying to wobble yourself to the bathroom :~P


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10 months ago

UZUMAKI REF IN A SHARK POST??? BEST THING EVER JUST HAD TO SHARE THIS FURTHER <333

You know what it's time for?

WEIRD SHARKS THAT'S WHAT IT'S TIME FOR

(IDs are in the image descriptions)

Pocket Shark

A King of the Hill screenshot of Dale Gribble throwing pocket sand, but an illustration of a pocket shark has been added over the sand.  The caption in the image reads Pocket Shark!

Pocket sharks are named for two small pocket glands appearing behind their pectoral fins. These glands are theorized to be luminous. Pocket sharks look like tiny, tiny sperm whales.

Angular Roughshark

A small shark on a dock.  The shark is mostly dark gray, but its face is reddish pink.  It has a snout like a pig or a bat.

Also called the pig-faced shark or the pig fish, angular roughsharks grow to be about 3 feet 4 in long on average. I personally think they're more bat-faced.

Goblin Shark

A shark with a long, blade-shaped snout.  Below the snout is a set of protruding jaws with pointed teeth.

Found in the deep sea, goblin sharks are known for being able to extend their jaws like a grabber tool made of teeth. Wikipedia says that these sharks' "flabby bodies" suggest that they are sluggish in nature.

Cookiecutter Shark

A small shark with its mouth open.  Its upper and lower jaw each make a perfect semicircle of pointed, evenly sized teeth.

The cookiecutter shark only grows to about 20 inches in length, but that doesn't stop it from biting into orcas, great whites, or humans. It suctions onto its meal with its lips and then goes to town. It removes perfect circles of flesh, hence its name.

Wobeggong Shark

A flat, mottled brown shark.  Its face has spiny protrusions that look like a beard.

Wobeggong refers to twelve species of carpet shark, so-named for their resemblance to a shag rug. They dwell on the bottom of the sea floor and wait for smaller fish to swim nearby.

Swell Shark

A small shark on the seafloor next to a coral reef.  The shark is alternating stripes of tan and brown, and covered with small dark spots.

Swell sharks like to hide in crevices of algae-covered rocks, waiting for prey to swim by. They are so named not because they're really swell (though they are) but because as a defense mechanism, they can swell up to double their size by swallowing sea water.

Greenland Shark

A shark in green water.  The shark's snout is white and the rest of its body is mottled shades of brown.  The shark's eyes are gray and cloudy.

The Greenland shark has high concentrations of urea in its body. It is theorized to have a lifespan of 250 to 500 years, and it can grow up to 23 feet long. Greenland sharks have been found with moose and reindeer in their stomachs. Because of the shark's toxic levels of urea, its flesh must be fermented or otherwise treated before consumption.

Viper Dogfish

A small black sharp with large blue eyes.  The shark's jaws protrude out from the rest of its face.

Like the goblin shark, the viper dogfish's jaws can protude from the rest of its head, though its coloring means the viper dogfish looks significantly more Xenomorphish when doing so. This small shark is a member of the lanternshark family, and its underside glows.

Pointy-Nosed Blue Chimaera

A blue-gray shark with a clouded blue eye surrounded by pitch-black water.  The shark's tail fin is so small it looks non-existent, and it is difficult to see the shark's mouth.

Also know as the abyssal ghostshark, this deep sea shark has a venomous spine on its dorsal fin used for defense.

Genie's Dogfish Shark

A small, long-bodied shark being held above the water by a pair of gloved hands.  The shark has large eyes relative to its body, with blue irises and gray sclera.

Genie's dogfish shark is a small species found in the gulf of Mexico and the west Atlantic Ocean. It has real life anime eyes.

Ninja Lanternshark

A small black shark with white eyes and lips.

The ninja lanternshark is a small bioluminescent shark. It is all black except for white markings around its eyes and mouth. It reaches about a foot and a half in length.

Frilled Shark

A gray shark with a long, eel-like body.  Its open mouth shows rows of textured teeth, which seem to form frills.

The frilled shark is sometimes called a living fossil, as it is basically unchanged in the past 80 million years. They are named for their teeth, which each have three points.

Epaulette Shark

A small shark on the floor of an aquarium tank.  The shark is light brown with black spots of varying size across its body.  There is a massive black spot ringed in white above its pectoral fin.

Epaulette sharks are named for the large spots behind their pectoral fins. These sharks frequently visit tidal pools and have adapted to long periods of oxygen deprivation by shutting down non-essential neural functions. Epaulette sharks often "walk" with their fins on the sea floor rather than swim.

Horn Shark

A small shark on the sea floor.  The shark's body is dappled brown, with small black spots across its surface.  The shark's dorsal fins have small spikes sticking up from them.

Similar to the epaulette sharks, horn sharks like to walk on the sea floor with their fins. However, these sharks have sharp spines to deter predators.

This Ridiculousness

Artist's rendering of Helicoprion shark.  This shark is gray with a white underside and a long, blade-shaped snout.  Below the shark's snout, its mouth is open.  The mouth has no teeth in the upper jaw and in the lower jaw there is a wheel of teeth arranged like spikes on a buzzsaw.

A prehistoric shark, helicoprion lived 20 million years ago and was apparently part buzzsaw. A fossil unearthed in Idaho in 2014 showed that these sharks had no teeth in their upper jaw, and a whorl of teeth in their lower jaw. It's a shame Junji Ito wasn't introduced to this shark during the writing of Uzumaki.