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Stunned marine experts from National Geographic found the hammerhead sharks and rays drifting in Kavachi, an active volcano off the coast of New Guinea. The volcano last erupted in 2014 so
the crew were shocked to find not just life but large carnivores circling its turbulent base. Ocean engineer Brennan Phillips told National Geographic: "The idea of there being large
animals like sharks hanging out and living inside the caldera of this volcano conflicts with what we know about Kavachi, which is that it erupts. “But when it’s erupting there’s no way
anything could live in there. “So to see larger animals like this that are living and could potentially die at any moment brings up lots of questions. “Do they leave? “Do they have some sort
of sign that it’s about to erupt? "That’s what makes discovering these animals down inside the volcano so perplexing. "They’re living in a place where they could ‘die at any
moment,’ so how do they survive?” "It's very turbid, so the water is very cloudy. None of these things are good for fish.” The area is now colloquially known as ‘Shark-ano’.
Scientists believe the sharks must have mutated to survive in the hot and acidic environment. New Guinea is located on the Pacific Ring of Fire - a string of tectonically active zones prone
to volcanoes and earthquakes that circles the Pacific.