By Peter de Kruijff, ABC

Photo: ABC/SUPPLIED

Swimming at a crawl with cloudy eyes and mottled skin, the Greenland shark looks like it's seen better days.

The shark's eyes were thought to be barely functional, as it spends most of its time in pitch-black waters up to 3000 metres deep.

Its unearthly look is often accentuated by the presence of tiny crustacean parasites hooked into the corneas on its eyes, but the Greenland shark (Somniosus microcephalus) can live up to 400 years in the chilly North Atlantic and Arctic waters, making it one of the longest-living vertebrates on Earth.

According to new research, published in Nature Communications, its seemingly undead eyes are fully functioning and barely deteriorate, even after a century.

Unravelling the shark's anti-ageing secrets may benefit human eye health.

Photo: ABC/SUPPLIED

Australian marine biologist and lead study author Lily Fogg, from the University of Basel, said some sort of mechanism

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