
Video captures rare 'doomsday' oarfish swimming near Mexico beach shore
Mexico beachgoers were treated to a rare sighting earlier this month of a shimmering oarfish, native to the deep sea and seen in Japanese folklore as a signal of impending doom.
The "doomsday" fish was spotted alive at the nation's Baja California Sur beach Feb. 9, according to AccuWeather and FOX affiliate KMSP-TV.
Video shows the marine serpent swimming by the shore in the clear shallow waters while stubbed beachgoers surround it. When the fish stops moving someone proceeds to gently grabbed and moved toward the water.
"What are you doing?" one witness asks the fish in the video.
"That's an oarfish. They're almost never seen live," another says.
In 2024, there were at least three separate oarfish sightings in Southern California, including one in San Diego last August that marked the region's first spotting in nearly 125 years. However, all three fish were found dead.
Where were oarfish spotted in California last year?
In August, a 12-foot-long dead oarfish was recovered by a group of "sciencey" kayakers and snorkelers swimming at La Jolla Cove in San Diego.
In September, a second oarfish was found dead in Orange County's Huntington Beach in September according to Ben Frable, an in-house fish expert for the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
On Nov. 6, a roughly 10-foot oarfish was found dead at a beach in Encinitas, around 25 miles north of San Diego, Frable confirmed.
How are oarfish an omen of impending disaster?
The sight of a "doomsday fish" in shallow waters serves as an omen of an impending earthquake dating back to 17th century Japan, according to travel outlet Atlas Obscura.
Japanese folklore indicates the fish belonged to servants of the sea god Ryūjin. Hence the fish are also known as "ryugu no tsukai," which translates to "messenger from the sea god's palace." It's believed the oarfish were sent from the palace toward the surface to warn people of earthquakes.
What do scientists say dead oarfish sightings mean?
Scientists are unable to theorize the reason why three oarfish have washed ashore last year, saying that each specimen collected provides a unique opportunity to learn more about the species.
Especially since there is more than one variable at play in the so-called "strandings" of the oarfish, including shifts in the climate patterns of El Niño and La Niña, Frable said in November.

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Newsweek
6 hours ago
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Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
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After a look around, Ramage reported: 'There were still several small craft and escorts around, but no worthwhile targets that we could see. I decided to put some distance between us and this hornet's nest.' While Parche was fighting its way into a fiery hell and back, Whelchel and Steelhead were also busy on the sidelines — sending four torpedoes at a troop carrier at 4:49 a.m. and another four at a freighter. Both subs subsequently disengaged, having suffered neither damage nor casualties in the 46-minute melee. A postwar assessment credited Steelhead with the 7,169-ton freighter Dakar Maru and the 8,195-ton transport Fuso Maru. Both subs were jointly credited with the 8,990-ton transport Yoshino Maru. Parche emerged from its solo torpedo duel with credit for the 10,238-ton tanker Koei Maru and 4,471-ton passenger-cargo ship Manko Maru. Both submarine officers were decorated for their outstanding performance that night. Steelhead's commander, David Whelchel, was awarded the Silver Star, while Ramage received the Medal of Honor from President Franklin D. Roosevelt on Jan. 10, 1945 — not so much for the tonnage his sub had destroyed, considerable though it had been, as for the wild way he had achieved it. Asked what drove him throughout the encounter, he simply said, 'I got mad.' Ramage continued to rise up the Navy ranks, reaching the command of Military Sea Transport in Washington and retiring in 1969 as a vice admiral. He died in Bethesda, Maryland, on April 15, 1990, and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.