THE ANIMALS

This Tiny Shrimp Sees Colors You Don't Even Have a Word For


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πŸ‘οΈ The Animals

Mantis Shrimp Can See Colors We Don't Have Names For

πŸŽ™οΈ Category: Wild Fact

There is a creature living in the ocean right now.

The size of your hand. Tucked into a little sand burrow at the bottom of the sea, not thinking, not stressed, looking β€” honestly β€” kind of adorable in photos. Big cartoon eyes. Colorful little body. Very peaceful energy.

πŸ”« It punches with the force of a bullet.

That's the mantis shrimp. And before you write this off as just another "cool animal" episode β€” sit with this one thing first:

It can see colors that don't exist in any human language.

Not colors we haven't gotten around to naming. Colors we genuinely cannot name. Colors that no human brain has ever experienced β€” not once, not anywhere, not in all of human history. Colors that have been sitting quietly in the ocean, seen by this one tiny creature and no one else, for four hundred million years.

Before the dinosaurs. Before birds. Before the first flower. This little animal was already there, watching a world we will never have access to.

🎨 Humans have 3 types of color detectors. The mantis shrimp has 16.

And the gap between three and sixteen is not just a bigger number β€” it is a completely different kind of seeing. It sees UV light, the invisible stuff that quietly sunburns your skin on cloudy days, bouncing off every surface around you right now while your eyes skip right past it. It sees polarized light β€” it can look at any object and detect the exact direction the light is traveling, like having a living compass wired directly into its vision.

Humans have spent centuries building machines just to detect these things. The mantis shrimp was born with all of it already installed. And it does not think about this once.

πŸ’₯ Then there's the punch.

The speed is comparable to a fired bullet β€” not exaggeration, the actual measured result. The force hits harder than your own body weight, delivered from a club the size of a marble. When that club swings through water at that speed, the water cannot keep up. Bubbles form and collapse. That collapse releases heat so extreme that for a fraction of a fraction of a second, the temperature rivals the surface of the sun.

Not a metaphor. That is what physically happens.

Aquarium owners call it the "thumb splitter."

πŸ‘€ But here is the twist nobody sees coming.

Despite having 16 color channels to our 3 β€” the mantis shrimp is actually worse than you at telling two similar shades apart.

There is a reason for that. And when you hear it, everything rearranges itself into something even more surprising than the original story.

🎧 In this episode of The Animal, we get into:

✨ What it means to see a color that has no name in any human language

πŸ”¬ The hidden light bouncing off everything around you that you're permanently blind to

πŸ’₯ A punch so fast the water briefly reaches the temperature of the sun's surface

πŸŒ€ The twist that quietly flips the whole story on its head

🌊 A closing that will sit with you longer than you expect

This episode is not really about a wild animal.

It is about how many versions of this world exist right now β€” completely invisible to us. Not hidden. Not secret. Just built for eyes that are not ours.

The mantis shrimp has been watching one of those worlds since before the first dinosaur ever existed.

🎧 Press play. You will not look at the ocean β€” or anything around you β€” the same way after.

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THE ANIMALSBy S.Charlie