Loading Page...

What has been found in the River Thames?

Along the River Thames, mudlarks have also found traces of these ancient beasts. Several years ago, Stefano Ambrogi discovered part of a skull from a woolly rhinoceros in the river. Bones from woolly rhinos have also been found in the Thames Estuary and along the river under Battersea Power Station.



People Also Ask

Over the years, reports of body parts showing up in the waters of London have included chins, pelvises, arms, and even the dead body of a sheep wrapped in a duvet. Worryingly, this is not as uncommon as you might think. It is reported that, on average, a dead human body is found once a week1 in the River Thames.

MORE DETAILS

Dating back to between 3516 and 3365 B.C.E., the femur is one of the oldest objects ever found in the Thames, wrote Time Out's Alice Saville.

MORE DETAILS

For thousands of years, the Thames served as a dumping ground. People would throw their daily garbage in the river and the tide would distribute it and it would essentially disappear from sight, Miller says. It was nasty, especially as London's population grew and the Thames became increasingly affected.

MORE DETAILS

Tiny sharks, just half a metre long, have been found in the river Thames outside of London. Four dogfish, also known as mud sharks, were discovered 20 miles downstream of the Big Smoke in Denton, Gravesend, during a study by the City of London Corporation.

MORE DETAILS

A navigational error: according to the scientists who conducted the post-mortem, the most likely explanation for the incident was simply that the whale was seeking to return to its normal feeding grounds in the North Atlantic and took a wrong turn, mistakenly swimming west up the Thames rather than taking the longer ...

MORE DETAILS

A bald and astounding police statistic comes back to me every time I look into its steely waters: along the 213-mile long Thames, a body is retrieved from the river on average every week. The majority (39 last year) are found in the London area.

MORE DETAILS

The River Thames, known alternatively in parts as the River Isis, is a river that flows through southern England including London. At 215 miles, it is the longest river entirely in England and the second-longest in the United Kingdom, after the River Severn.



MORE DETAILS

It was speculated that the scaly skin could belong to a boa constrictor that had been abandoned or even escaped from its owner. The snake species is non-venomous and normally found in Central and South America.

MORE DETAILS

As the tide dropped, they would wade into the mud to grab lumps of coal, pieces of rope or anything else careless boatmen had dropped overboard that they could sell. Mudlarks were a chiefly London phenomenon because few port cities had as large, exposed riverbanks where they could descend to do their work.

MORE DETAILS

2,485 miles/ 4,000 km up The Amazon River. Bull sharks have even been seen 2,485 miles/ 4,000 km away from the ocean up the Amazon river. Bull sharks have been known to travel all the way from the Brazilian coast up river to Iquitos in Peru and into northern Bolivia.

MORE DETAILS

While there have been past “sightings,” most have turned out to be pranks or misidentifications. The reality is that the largest of the Great Lakes (Lake Superior and Michigan) are extremely deep lakes that are too cold for sharks.

MORE DETAILS

The Greenwich Foot Tunnel is an underground walkway that allows you to walk from Greenwich to the Isle of Dogs in London. The reason why this tunnel is so special is that it allows you to walk under the River Thames which is the main river that snakes through the city.

MORE DETAILS