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Two paddleboarders accidentally got up close with a great white shark while 100 yards offshore of a Cape Cod beach. Margaret ...
Until then, we only really catch its dorsal fin before victims are ripped under the waves as ... of shark-centric horror (with diminishing returns). It also inflamed our fear of sharks as man-eating ...
While "Jaws" made people fear sharks, it's predatory humans — such as those in Mexico's shark fin trade — that sharks should ...
Despite frequent near-death experiences, she respects sharks as powerful yet misunderstood predators and emphasizes the importance of fear and presence when interacting with them in the wild.
Into the Deep commits the most unforgivable sin of any “fin flick”: The sharks on the poster look better than the ones in the actual movie.
Since 1970, global shark populations have declined by more than 70%. Right now, humans are killing over a hundred million sharks a year, driven by the insatiable fin market.
The toothy villain of “Jaws” terrified audiences in 1975. Offscreen, the hit film — which is celebrating its 50th anniversary — impacted sharks in unexpected ways.
It also inflamed our fear of sharks as man-eating monsters, said Jennifer Martin, an environmental historian who teaches at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
It also inflamed our fear of sharks as man-eating monsters, said Jennifer Martin, an environmental historian who teaches at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
It also inflamed our fear of sharks as man-eating monsters, said Jennifer Martin, an environmental historian who teaches at the University of California, Santa Barbara.