How did sharks become Earth's 'ultimate survivors'? Paleontologist John Long fin ds answers in new book 'The Secret History of Sharks'
"The Secret History of Sharks" author John Long met with Live Science to discuss his new book, recent revelations about megalodons, and how he got over his fear of great whites.
1/15/20251 min read


Sharks are some of the most successful, fierce and mysterious predators our world has ever known. With a history spanning around half a billion years, the shark bloodline has produced the mighty megalodon; the bizarre, buzz-saw-jawed Helicoprion; and the fearsome great white shark. So how have they done it?
John Long, a paleontology professor at Flinders University in Australia, has been researching ancient sharks and other fossilized fish for more than 40 years. In his latest book, "The Secret History of Sharks" (Ballantine Books, 2024), Long tells the incredible story of shark evolution. He spoke to Live Science about what he's learned.
John Long: They've been resourceful and adaptive. They're the only group of backboned, jawed creatures on the planet to have survived all five major mass extinction events. And it's not a matter of them saying, "Oh, there's a massive extinction event coming; I'll have to whip up some new adaptation." It's that at any time these mass extinction events struck, there was enough variety in sharks that at least some lineages of them got through.
As they developed a superior body plan, which they did by the Devonian period [419 million to 359 million years ago], sharks then looked a lot like sharks today. That body plan allowed them to diversify a lot more rapidly, so each mass extinction event had less and less of an effect on them from that point on.
They also started diversifying in the Devonian period to develop crushing types of tooth plates, as well as sharp, piercing, tearing and slicing teeth. They even developed filter feeding well before any other vertebrates. So they've always had this ability to be very plastic with their dental development, creating new tooth types and new tooth tissues. That's been one of their biggest saving graces, almost like a Swiss Army knife kind of dentition, of adaption, that they could adapt to any sort of food resource that was around.