Try GOLD - Free
Secrets from the deep
BBC Countryfile Magazine
|November 2025
Venture into the bowels of London's Natural History Museum and you'll discover a realm of deep-sea monsters and rarely seen oddities. Melissa Hobson meets the curious denizens of the Spirit Collection
Before I realise what's happening, the lid is off - and James Maclaine is pulling out a fistful of deep-sea anglerfish. I hadn't been expecting him to plonk his bare hand inside the jar. I peer more closely. It looks... squishy.
Maclaine, senior curator of fish at London's Natural History Museum, is giving me a behind-the-scenes look at some of the specimens that aren't on public display: some are too large to feature in the main exhibits, others too precious. Dotted around the room are glass jars filled with curious specimens preserved in spirits, many over 100 years old. Maclaine removes a few with the casual air of someone who's been surrounded by rare curios every day for decades.
Animals that are too big for the jars are placed in steel tanks. The clanging of chains as a heavy metal lid is winched off announce that one is being opened. A chemical smell with a hint of smoked mackerel wafts our way. Then Maclaine hauls out the wrinkled snout of a primeval beast from the dark liquid - over time, fish oil seeps into the preserving fluid, staining it a rusty red - and I see one of the planet's longest-lived species: a Greenland shark. These behemoths can live to at least 250 years old, but might even reach the age of 500.
Though only half the size of the expected maximum length for the species, this 3.5m-long specimen is too heavy to lift clear from the tank. Its gaping mouth reveals teeth perfectly designed for chomping on large food items such as dead whales: the top teeth latch on while the bottom slice. “It grabs on, rolls and saws through flesh,” explains Maclaine. What's not immediately evident is that the carcass is stuffed with something rather unorthodox. The shark had looked sunken and strange after dissection, so the team “just shoved a load of lab coats in it”, says Maclaine, laughing at the idea that the stitches might burst in 100 years' time, spewing foetid lab coats and puzzling future researchers.
This story is from the November 2025 edition of BBC Countryfile Magazine.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM BBC Countryfile Magazine
BBC Countryfile Magazine
Fireworks still thrill, but it's time to embrace something less explosive
I love fireworks. Nature's blazing colours ceding to blazing fires, and acceptance - now the comforting melancholy of September and October has settled - that winter is in the wings. An excitement builds, towards the season of staying in and going out, heralded by sparks in the dark.
2 mins
November 2025
BBC Countryfile Magazine
In search of monsters
Britain is a land populated by dragons, giants, selkies and supernatural beings – or so the legends go. Kevin Parr meets Monsterland author Nicholas Jubber to hunt for otherworldly creatures
7 mins
November 2025
BBC Countryfile Magazine
Get into geocaching
Geocaching is a fun, low-cost hobby that spans the generations. Whether you're a curious six-year-old or a grandparent with a sense of adventure, here's how to get started
3 mins
November 2025
BBC Countryfile Magazine
FUELLING THE FLAMES
Once a year, in a thrilling spectacle, the Devon town of Ottery St Mary is set aglow by flaming tar barrels carried through the streets.
3 mins
November 2025
BBC Countryfile Magazine
The big questions answered
\"If you want to track down royal resting places, you'll have your work cut out\"
13 mins
November 2025
BBC Countryfile Magazine
The king and I
It has its own king, a population of three and was once the landing place for an invasion of England. Dixe Wills ventures to England's most unusual tiny isle
7 mins
November 2025
BBC Countryfile Magazine
TOP 10 NEOLITHIC STRUCTURES
Stone circles, long barrows and sacred sites - Ellie Tennant picks remarkable Stone Age creations to visit in Britain and Ireland
9 mins
November 2025
BBC Countryfile Magazine
Secrets from the deep
Venture into the bowels of London's Natural History Museum and you'll discover a realm of deep-sea monsters and rarely seen oddities. Melissa Hobson meets the curious denizens of the Spirit Collection
6 mins
November 2025
BBC Countryfile Magazine
Ancestral connections
Our landscapes are littered with reminders of our mystical past, and it's one part of living in Britain that has always fascinated me.
1 min
November 2025
BBC Countryfile Magazine
Kit Running shoes
Whether you're aiming for parkrun or a marathon, here are three road-running options to tick the race-day and training-shoe boxes
1 min
November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
