The squid’s eye is trained on the camera, dilating to the size of a saucer as it steadily draws nearer. Its skin looks as soft as satin, rippling delicately as it siphons water into its mantle. Just a few feet under the surface, its long tentacles, each a girthy strip of vermillion tie-dye, sewed up with an endless avenue of suckers, hover listlessly. The slow intake of a diver’s respirator, followed by the tinkle of a stream of bubbles, is the only noise in the video.
It was astonishingly rare: a live specimen showed up in a harbor in Japan, swimming right at the surface in Toyama Bay. A diver, perhaps ill-advisedly, plunged into the water on Christmas Eve and recorded some of the most vivid and close-up footage of a 12-foot-long squid ever seen. The mere sight of its gargantuan, human-like eye, mere inches from the camera, was a discovery on its own.
"I LOST CONTROL OF MY BODY."
The diver, Akinobu Kimura, told The New York Times that the animal "wrapped tentacles around me and I lost control of my body," but he came out of the encounter unscathed. Why it was there, the world’s most mysterious animal, suddenly close enough to touch, no one knew. Some speculated that the animal was injured or dying, while others suggest that warming waters could contribute to higher incidences of strandings — and that sightings like these may become more frequent with the onset of climate change.
When the footage hit the internet, giant squid-mania hit a zenith. A graph of the search term "giant squid" shows an enormous spike just after the footage was released.
One of the first people on the internet to suggest that the video did in fact feature a member of the giant squid family was Dr. Chris Mah, an invertebrate expert with the Smithsonian Institution who runs a popular blog and tracks science communication in both the US and Japan.
"It’s pretty hard to sympathize with a dead, white piece of calamari 30 feet long," said Mah, as an explanation for why squid videos like the most recent one accrue such a captive audience. "But videos like this bring a liveliness, a dynamism to understanding these animals."
People gravitate toward squids, says Mah, because they are, in many ways, like us. Along with octopuses, they are some of the most intelligent marine animals. They have worked out brilliant solutions to some of the most complicated evolutionary problems — like how to survive in the cold waters and immense pressure thousands of feet below the surface, how to see prey in almost pitch-black darkness, and how to travel through the ocean by propelling large jets of water in their wake.
But this wasn’t the first time we’d glimpsed one of the world’s most elusive animals — the first breakthrough happened over a decade ago. It was the morning of September 30th, 2004, and a team of Japanese scientists off the Ogasawara Islands in the North Pacific Ocean had set out to hook a giant squid on a baited fishing line, camera trap attached. Soon enough, they struck gold. For four hours, a camera set up by the scientists took 500 photos — one every 30 seconds — of the giant squid. The squid was 2,950 feet below the surface — a depth of about eight football fields. The squid itself was impressive, too, at 25 feet, which is about as long as a two-story house is tall. Slightly smaller than the average giant squid, the animal appeared to attack the bait in a way scientists hadn’t anticipated — by using its tentacles first as a weapon.
















