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Michael Phelps never stood a chance in a race against a great white shark – here’s why

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Michael Phelps

On Sunday night, "Shark Week" viewers were disappointed to find out that swimmer Michael Phelps, sometimes called the greatest Olympian of all time, did not actually race against a great white shark.

Instead, Phelps raced against a simulation of a shark, using a special swimsuit with a large fin to help him move through the water at superhuman speeds.

Even with the help of that monofin, though, Phelps lost to the shark by two seconds.

That's because great whites are really, really fast. They can speed through the water at 25 miles per hour (mph), potentially achieving 35 mph for short bursts. That allows them to propel their entire bodies out of the water.

Even top Olympians like Phelps are unlikely to surpass 6 mph while swimming in the conventional way.

For the "race," Phelps swam 100 meters alone in chilly open water off the coast of South Africa. Viewers watched a simulation of a shark swim alongside him. Discovery producers calculated that shark's speed by towing a seal-shaped decoy in front of a real white shark for 100 meters, and measuring the shark's time. The ocean swimmer came in at 36.1 seconds, just over 6 mph. 

Great white sharks often go much faster than that, of course, but the producers of Discovery Channel's "Shark Week" pointed out that the sharks don't usually keep their speeds up for distances as long as 100 meters.

Under the conditions set for the race, Phelps did pretty well: He beat the world record for the 100m freestyle (set without special gear) by about 10 seconds. Of course, his monofin made a big difference. 

Phelps says he's down to race again.

Although many fans were disappointed that they didn't get to watch Phelps race a real shark, none of us should really want to watch him attempt that. Such a race might end badly, as evidenced by this Discovery video showing a determined shark chasing down a decoy.

Of course, if Phelps really wanted a challenge, marine biologist Andrew Nosal suggested he take on the fastest shark out there, the mako, which can leave great whites behind in its wake. 

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Michael Phelps wants a rematch in warmer water after losing to a shark by two seconds

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Michael PhelpsThe INSIDER Summary:

  • Viewers were disappointed when Michael Phelps lost by only two seconds in a race against a holographic shark.
  • Phelps joked on Twitter that he wants a rematch in wamer waters.
  • The temperature was about 20 degrees colder than the olympic swimming pools Phelps is used to.

Michael Phelps’ much-anticipated race against a great white shark served up a double dose of disappointment for viewers on Sunday night. Not only did Phelps swim against a fake hologram shark — but he lost to his opponent by two seconds.

To be fair, the odds were already stacked against Phelps: Great white sharks can reach top speeds of 25 to 35 miles per hour, while Phelps reached top speeds of only 5 to 6 miles per hour, even while wearing a monofin. Still, despite his loss — and the outpouring of ire on the internet — Phelps joked on Twitter that he’s down for a rematch, as long as it happens in a slightly toastier environment.

By racing in the waters off the coast of South Africa, the 23-time Olympic gold medalist experienced a significant drop in temperature compared to the balmy norm of Olympic standard swimming pools. While the waters surrounding the continent are generally warm, the southern tip of South Africa can be significantly colder. The average sea temperature around Cape Town is around 59 degrees Fahrenheit, which is 20 degrees colder than the mandated water temperature for Olympic swimming pools. The temperature during the race on Sunday was estimated to be a chilly 56 degrees.

The ideal water temperature for Phelps to race against a shark (simulated or otherwise) would be close to the Olympic standard of 77 to 82 degrees Fahrenheit. This temperature addresses most of the factors that can affect a swimmer’s performance. Water that’s too cold can cause muscles to cramp up and waste energy by creating heat, while water that’s too hot prevents a swimmer from getting rid of excess heat through sweat and can cause muscles to overheat.

Swimming in colder water increases a swimmer’s risk of getting hypothermia, which can obviously slow a swimmer down. In a review published in the journal "Biology of Exercise" in 2014, researchers explained that, because “water is a much better heat conductor than air,” humans easily lose body heat to cold water. In the cold, a person’s metabolic rate tends to increase in order to stay warm, and doing so takes up a lot of energy. In an interview with CNN in 2013, Professor Mike Tipton of the Human and Applied Physiology Department at the University of Portsmouth explained that, while cold water may give a swimmer an immediate, energizing jolt — that’s what makes polar bear dips so appealing — that feeling is actually a state of shock, and prolonging the experience may cause irregular heart rhythms.

Temperature also has an effect on the density of the water, which in turn can slow down any objects moving through it. Colder water is more dense than warm water (which is why open water gets colder with increased depth). But usually the effects of temperature on water density are negligible at the temperature ranges and depths that athletes usually encounter.

Of course, Phelps shouldn’t request a rematch in waters that are too warm, either, as they can lead to dehydration and even death for competitive swimmers. In a tragic accident in 2010, U.S. National Team swimmer Fran Crippen died after racing in a pool that was officially 84 degrees. Other competitors that swam in the pool reported that it felt even hotter, and many experienced swollen limbs and disorientation as a result. In a study published in the journal "Science and Sports" in 2011, researchers showed that swimmers lost more water weight through sweating when immersed in a pool that was 90 degrees than they did at 73 or 80 degrees Fahrenheit.

For Phelps, the key is to find a sea where the temperature is just right.

A good option for the 2018 sequel to Phelps versus Shark could be Honolulu, Hawaii — and not just because the average sea temperature off the coast of Honolulu hovers around a balmy, Olympic-ready 80 degrees. The waters there are home to various species of actual, not holographic, sharks, leaving Phelps and the Discovery channel team no excuse to broadcast another disappointing virtual race.

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A shark expert explains what would really happen if Michael Phelps raced a live shark

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Recently, the Discovery Channel staged a race between 28-time Olympic-medal winner Michael Phelps and a CGI shark.

George Burgess, the director for the Florida Program for Shark Research at the Florida Museum of Natural History and contributor to SharkFest, explains what would've happened to Phelps if he'd been next to a real shark. Following is a transcript of the video.

You certainly don't wanna get in the water if you see a shark.

My name is George Burgess. I serve as the director for the Florida Program for Shark Research at the Florida Museum, which is part of the University of Florida.

Michael Phelps recently "raced" a shark, except Phelps didn't swim side-by-side with a real shark. He went up against a CGI shark ... that simulated how fast a shark would swim in a straight line. People were disappointed.

If Michael Phelps and a real shark had lined up side-by-side and run the kind of race that Michael Phelps is used to, he would have had his butt kicked.

Even the most adept Olympic swimmer is wholly ungraceful in the water. And the kicking of the feet, the splashing of the hands, couldn't serve as any better attraction to sharks there is. So, no, Michael Phelps, if he had a shark after him, the shark's gonna win every time.

I will say this, Michael's in pretty darn good shape. There's not a lot of body fat there. So, whatever got him was gonna get a lot of muscle and sinew and not so much fat. Maybe someone like myself would be a better meal because I have more calories in me than Michael does.

A far more interesting scenario, however, would have been, if you ... give Michael a head start and put the great white behind him and see how fast he could swim with the white shark chasing him.

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A shark expert says this US coastline could be the next danger zone for great white shark attacks

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George Burgess, the director for the Florida Program for Shark Research at the Florida Museum of Natural History and contributor to "SharkFest," explains how rising seal populations in New England could lead to a greater number of interactions between people and sharks. Following is a transcript of the video.

So if you’re swimming out there or surfing, you’re asking for it.

My name is George Buress. I serve as the director for the Florida Program for Shark Research at the Florida Museum, which is part of the University of Florida.

Certain places are certainly more dangerous than others, if you’re going to bring your family or yourself into the water. Off of New England now, white sharks are beginning to come back because seal colonies are now coming back. In the 1800s, 1700s, in the United States, there were very abundant populations of seals and sea lions and they were hunted a lot.

Back in 1972, the Marine Mammal Protection Act was enforced in the United States, which allowed all these animal to begin their recovery. And we’re seeing the benefits of that legislation now, as many of these sea mammals are returning to former areas that they once lived in and returning to levels of abundance closer to what they once had.

Of course as that happened, a large predator, such as a white shark, which loves these things as meals as adults are going to be following. While we’re happy to get those sea mammals back, we need to be cognizant that some of these large predators now will be nearby.

And beaches that we have owned for a hundred years because there are no seals around are now going to be inhabited by those seals. And we may to move up down the beach to go swimming from now on.

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Shark Week-themed cruises are now a thing — and you can even go diving with actual sharks

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Princess Cruises.

  • Princess Cruises now has Shark Week-themed cruises this summer from June to September.
  • The company says the cruises will have advanced screening of Shark Week programming, shark decorations, activities for children, and specialty cocktails for adults.
  • Princess Cruises also said there will be a shark diving experience.
  • All Caribbean Princess voyages to eastern and western Caribbean, certain Grand Princess voyages to Alaska, and certain Sapphire Princess voyages to Scandinavia will feature the Shark Week theme.
  • To learn more, you can visit the cruise company's website.


If anyone out there is a big fan of Shark Week, great news: Princess Cruises says it will now have a Shark Week-themed cruise.

In honor of the 30th anniversary of Shark Week, Princess Cruises says it's launching Shark Week activities on select cruise ships from June through September.

A representative from Princess Cruises told INSIDER that passengers will get access to advanced screening of this year's Shark Week programming before it officially airs on July 24, as well as other shark-themed activities.

The Shark Week-themed cruise.

Ships will be decorated to suit the theme and there will be passenger experiences that involve arts and crafts — and even diving with real sharks.

While the entire ship — from its elevators and restaurants to the exterior hull — will be decorated with sharks, according to the company, there will be plenty of activities for both children and adults. 

There will be glitter tattoos and face painting of a shark for kids as well as arts and crafts activities where they can make their own clay shark models and jewelry from real shark teeth, which Princess Cruises says are ethically sourced.

"Sharks continually shed their teeth," the representative from Princess Cruises said. According to the representative, the larger shark teeth come from phosphate mines in northern Africa while the smaller teeth are collected from beaches in Venice, Florida.

Shark-related activities for children.

Kids can wear fin-shaped hats and learn more about the oft-maligned sea creatures from experts. Adults will have access to specialty cocktails with names like Shark Attack Margarita and Great Blue Shark.

For those who want to get up close and personal with the real animals, Princess Cruises says it is offering Shark Diving encounters in Honolulu, Hawaii, and Whale Shark experiences in La Maz, Mexico.

Shark tooth jewelry making class for children.

Several Princess Cruise lines will feature the Shark Week theme.

Participating cruises include Caribbean Princess ships with eastern and western Caribbean itineraries departing on seven-day voyages from Fort Lauderlade between June and September. Passengers on select Grand Princess ships traveling to Alaska in mid-July will also enjoy shark-related activities. Sapphire Princess ships departing from the UK to Scandinavia between July and August are taking part as well.

So if you're really invested in Shark Week and interested in learning more, visit the cruise company's website.

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Here are 16 of the best Shark Week jokes from Twitter

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  • It's the most wonderful time of the year.
  • Also known as Shark Week, which will air on the Discovery Channel from July 22 to July 29.
  • The shark-themed extravaganza, which will be hosted by Shaquille O'Neal this year, has prompted some jokes on Twitter.
  • Here are 16 of the best of them.

 

It's the most wonderful time of the year  — also known as Shark Week, which will air on the Discovery Channel from July 22 to July 29.

The shark-themed extravaganza, which will be hosted by Shaquille O'Neal this year, has prompted some jokes on Twitter.

Here are 16 of the best of them.

A few people miss the old Shark Week.

Others love the addition of Shaq.

Some have been joking about President Donald Trump's reported fear of sharks, which Stormy Daniels previously told InTouch Weekly about. "I donate to all these charities and I would never donate to any charity that helps sharks. I hope all the sharks die," Trump, who was fixated on Shark Week at the time of their affair, reportedly said.

But most people just have a  pure love for Shark Week.

Although not everyone is sold on Shark Week, as a concept.

And, of course, some people are sharing the cold, hard truth.

For more great stories, head to INSIDER's homepage.

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Watch Rob Gronkowski swim with sharks in 'insane' experience for 'Shark Week'

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Gronk Shark Week

  • Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski dove into "Shark Week" over the weekend.
  • In a segment for SportsCenter's "Hang Time with Sam Alipour," Gronk swam with the sharks at Tiger Beach in the Bahamas.
  • "I'm just thinking about the San Jose Sharks," said Gronk, while attempting to cool his nerves before diving in.
  • You can read more about the experience here and watch the segment below, with Gronk entering the water at about the 1:50 mark.

 

 

SEE ALSO: Tom Brady has sacrificed at least $60 million in his career with discount contracts to keep the Patriots competitive

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6 vacations you should be taking if you're obsessed with Shark Week

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Nurse sharks in the Bahamas.

  • Shark Week is officially back.
  • There are plenty of shark-themed vacations you can take if you consider yourself a superfan. 
  • From the Bahamas to San Francisco, here are the destinations you should be traveling to if you're obsessed with Shark Week. 

 



Shark Week 2018 is officially upon us, and what better time to explore shark-themed vacations from sea to shining sea? For the adventurous traveler who likes their vacation with a serious side of danger, shark diving is an impossible-to-resist temptation. When I swam with sharks in the Bahamas, it was one of the most life-changing experiences of my life. I'd never been more terrified, and I lived to tell the (shark) tale.

For the more cautious (or rational) among us, we've also included options for *observing* these majestic species from the safety of land (or a boat, at the very least). From Australia to South Africa, Bali to the Bahamas, here are six shark-tastic getaways for travelers looking to get up close and personal with the most feared (and arguably the most misunderstood) creatures of the sea.

1.The East Coast of Australia

When I visited Surfers Paradise, a famous hub of culture, nightlife and, of course, beach life, on Australia's Gold Coast, the local surfers referred to great white sharks as "guys in gray suits." But thankfully, on Topdeck Travel's Tropical Adventure tour, you're swimming with reef sharks (a less terrifying variety of the species).

2. Bimini, Bahamas 

Go on the Great Hammerhead Safari with Bimini Scuba Center off the coast of Bimini island in the Bahamas. You can also opt to swim with Caribbean reef sharks (Australia's Bahamian cousins) in the open ocean.

hammerhead shark

3. San Francisco, California 

If you prefer to observe sharks from the safety of land (we get it), the Golden Gate Bridge is a perfect vista for whale- (especially humpbacks) and shark-watching. Topdeck Travel's Short Break tour is the ideal four-day excursion to this City by the Bay. There is also a population of great white sharks at the Farallon Islands, just 29 miles west of the Golden Gate Bridge.

4. The Similan Islands, Thailand 

The Similan Islands are home to a large population of whale sharks (yes, this hybrid-sounding name is an actual species in and of itself — and it's the largest fish in the sea BTW, at lengths of 40 feet or more!). If you want to see these local giants up close, you're in luck because Sunrise Divers offers the opportunity to dive and swim alongside them. These sharks are harmless, if enormous, and best spotted in the months of February to April. So plan for your next spring break trip now.

swimming with whale sharks mozambique

5. The South African Coast 

Feel free to call yourself the Ishmael of sharks after embarking on Topdeck Travel's Coast, Lesotho, and Cape Town tour; you'll encounter great whites along the fishing town of Gansbaai and the Algoa Bay coast. You can cage drive, or observe from the boat – we won't shame you for not diving in with a hungry, tormented shark desperate for a meal. Sixteen hundred miles of coastline provide ample opportunity for Moby Dick-style adventures (though the tropical climate is far preferable to the freezing New England waters).

6. Bali and the Gili Islands 

Dive with sharks on Topdeck Travel's Bali Island Hopper tour and know that your travels are helping the environment. The tour works with many local organizations that support these shark populations, so you will be swimming with friends.

For more great stories, head to INSIDER's homepage.

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9 places you can go diving with sharks — and what it looks like

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tiger beach shark diving bahamas

If shows like those on Discovery's Shark Week or National Geographic's SharkFest make you think "I'd like to see these creatures up close in the wild," you should get yourself SCUBA-certified.

Sharks are fascinating, often-misunderstood, and far more at risk from humans than we are from them.

There are places you can swim and snorkel with sharks, but as a diver, you can hover underwater and watch them in their natural environments.

The following locations for shark diving have been recommended by diving organizations like the Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI) as some of the best places to see sharks in the wild.

Before you book tickets, however, remember to exercise caution. Even though sharks aren't out to harm people, they might bite in a moment of curiosity or confusion, or if you bump into them. Many sharks are also threatened and endangered species, so it's important to ensure that you're diving with a group that understands the importance of conservation and doesn't encourage harmful behaviors like grabbing onto sharks.

But as long as you keep conservation and safety in mind, you really can get out there and enjoy the company of some of the most fascinating fish in the ocean. Here's where to go.

SEE ALSO: There's a compelling explanation for why we've never found aliens — and it could mean humanity is doomed

In Bajo Alcyone at Cocos Island in Costa Rica, you can watch scalloped hammerheads cruise by above you.



Thresher sharks come in from the deep sea to clean themselves at Monad Shoal, near Malapascua in the Philippines.



At Tiger Beach near Grand Bahama, you can get circled by curious tiger sharks.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Build-A-Bear is selling adorable shark stuffed animals in honor of Shark Week

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build a bear shark week

Shark Week — Discovery Channel's beloved annual eight-day marathon of shark-related content  — will make its long-awaited return on Sunday, and Build-A-Bear Workshop is getting in on the action.

The specialty chain that allows you to build your own stuffed animal is swapping out fuzz for fins in honor of Shark Week by releasing adorable shark stuffed animals as well as other shark-inspired items.

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The brand is selling two different shark stuffed animals for the occasion: a gray and white striped tiger shark and a blue spotted whale shark.

Read more: You can buy cow cuddles for $75 an hour at this luxurious bed and breakfast

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Additionally, Build-A-Bear is selling Shark Week-themed tank tops, shorts, and Hawaiian-style button-up shirts to dress your furry friends in.

You can also supplement your shark's look with a number of accessories. There's a strap-on surfboard with which your shark can catch a wave, and sunglasses they can wear to block out the haters.

And if you want to get in on the fun, you can slap on one of Build-A-Bear's fuzzy slap bracelets with a plush great white shark or blue shark on top.

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The sharks cost $29 and clothing and accessories for the stuffed animals start at $4.50. You can purchase items individually or in a $63 gift set that includes the shark of your choice, one of the Shark Week outfits, a surf board, and other accessories on the Build-A-Bear website.

Build-A-Bear did not respond to INSIDER's request for comment.

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You can now buy Baby Shark cereal just in time for Shark Week

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babyshark

Kellogg's is launching a Baby Shark breakfast cereal just in time for Shark Week.

The whimsical cereal includes berry-flavored loops and marshmallows. The company said the arrival of the new product coincides with "a popular week for discussing sharks."

"We know Baby Shark is a catchy tune that has captured the hearts of many families," Kellogg marketing director Erin Storm said in a statement given to INSIDER.

babyshark

Read more: The sold-out singing 'Baby Shark' toys are so popular that third-party sellers are offering them for more than 10 times their original price

"New Kellogg's Baby Shark cereal was created to expand on the joy families feel in a tasty way,' she added. 

Kellogg's Baby Shark cereal is the result of a partnership with Pinkfong, the children's educational brand of SmartStudy, a South Korean educational entertainment company that created the song. 

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The cereal will be available available at Sam's Club starting August 17 and Walmart in late September. 

"Baby Shark" is a catchy South Korean educational song that captivated millions when it went viral earlier this year. The song was so popular, it made it on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and inspired an upcoming television show. 

A number of celebrities, including Cardi B and John Legend, also took to social media to express their love for the tune. 

Jacket: @drome_official Pants: #iamgia Bodysuit: @deathbydollsofficial Purse :Birkin Pussy Earrings @jenniferfisherjewelry

A post shared by MOSTHATEDCARDI (@iamcardib) on Jan 24, 2019 at 4:46pm PST on

Making too much noise at lunch

A post shared by John Legend (@johnlegend) on Mar 26, 2019 at 12:24pm PDT on

maaamaa shark dooo doo doo dooo

A post shared by Kylie ✨ (@kyliejenner) on Sep 5, 2018 at 5:46pm PDT on

 

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Vans just launched a collection of 'Shark Week'-themed sneakers, clothing, and accessories

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  • Vans and Discovery are collaborating on a 'Shark Week'-themed sneaker collection.
  • The collection features a Sk8-Hi featuring a great white shark face, and a Slip-On decorated with cartoon shark graphics.
  • The sneakers cost $65 and $75, and proceeds will support Oceana's mission to protect our oceans and marine life. 
  • Visit INSIDER's homepage for more stories.

Vans and Discovery have come together on a select footwear range to celebrate this year's Shark Week. Comprised of a Sk8-Hi and Slip-On, proceeds from the collaborative collection will support Oceana's mission to protect the world's oceans and the sharks that call them home.

The Sk8-Hi is centered around a powerful shark print that plays on Vans' iconic side stripe detail. Constructed of canvas and suede, the shoe features re-enforced toecaps, padded collars, and rubber waffle outsoles paired with contrasting white sole foxing. The canvas upper found on the accompanying Slip-On is decorated with a playful illustrated shark print marked with polka dot and stripe patterns. Detailing on the shoe comes in the form of elastic side accents, padded collars and the rubber waffle outsole contrasting white sole foxing pairing once again.

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Priced at $65 and $75 USD, the Discovery Shark Week x Vans collection is available now at vans.com and select retailers.

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3 people have been bitten by sharks in Florida over 3 days. Experts share tips for minimizing your risk of a shark attack.

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Shark

It's the annual Shark Week extravaganza on the Discovery Channel this week, and it seems to be shark week in Florida, too.

On July 27, a shark pushed surfer Frank O'Rourke off his board near Jacksonville Beach Pier and bit his arm. O'Rourke was able to catch a wave back to shore, where he was treated for injuries, CNN reported. That same day, a 49-year-old man survived a shark bite on the leg while boogie boarding at New Smyrna Beach. And two days later, 18-year-old surfer Reed Zipperer was bitten at New Smyrna Beach, too; Zipperer's left hand needed 19 stitches, CBS News reported.

According to Erich Ritter, a scientist from the Shark Research Institute at Princeton University, incidents like these that involve single, superficial wounds suggest "exploratory bites." Such hit-and-run attacks account for about 80% to 90% of shark bites, Ritter told Business Insider.

"The shark is trying to figure out what we could be," he said. "The animal's not clamping down because we're an unknown and could be dangerous."

Read More: 3 people were attacked by sharks in North Carolina in June. Here's what might be going on and why they all survived, according to experts.

bull shark

According to the International Wildlife Museum, your odds of being bitten by a shark are 1 in about 4 million.

But Ritter and other shark experts say there are still easy ways you can minimize your risk of encountering a shark in the water if you're nervous about it.

How to avoid sharks

Avoid swimming when visibility conditions in the water are poor, Ritter suggested. That could be during the early morning hours before the sun has risen high in the sky, at twilight or dusk while the sun is setting, or in areas where the water is murky (like at the mouth of a river where fresh water, salt water, and sediment mix).

George Burgess, the former director of the Florida Program for Shark Research, agreed.

"Don't go in the water between dusk and dawn — time periods when sharks are most active," Burgess previously told Business Insider

According to Ritter, sharks aren't necessarily the most aggressive at these times; rather, it's when they have the hardest time seeing.

"This means that the shark has to come closer to objects in the water, because as soon as light intensity goes down, it has a harder time estimating distance and swims into you. So that's interpreted as aggression," he said.

Burgess and Ritter also said swimmers should avoid areas where fish — most sharks' preferred food — are abundant.

shark water fish

"If you see seabirds diving, if you see fishes jumping, if you see humans fishing off of the shoreline, that means there's fish around. If there's fish, there's probably sharks," Burgess said.

What to do if you do encounter a shark in the water

In the event that a shark approaches you and looks like it might make contact, try hitting the animal in its sensitive nose, Burgess said.

"If you can bop it on the nose with your fist, it likely will veer away and, once again, you hopefully will have enough time to get out of the water," he said.

He added: "If a shark's got you in its jaws, the eyes and the gill slits — the five openings behind the eyes — are very sensitive. Stick your fingers in there. Claw at them. Some people that have been bit have had success in getting them to open their mouths when you poke at their eye."

Surfer

If a shark shows up in the water, Ritter said, swimmers should assume a vertical position, stop moving, and maintain eye contact with the animal.

In a 2012 study, Ritter and his co-author Raid Amin showed that adopting a vertical body position rather than a horizontal one kept a bull shark at a greater distance during an encounter and also decreased the chances of the animal approaching. 

Ritter said this could work because most organisms in the ocean are horizontal, so sharks may be less willing to approach an object with a different orientation.

Caribbean_reef_shark

In another study, the two scientists found that Caribbean reef sharks were able to identify which direction a scuba diver's body was facing —  the sharks preferred to approach from a point outside the diver's field of vision, which showed that the sharks knew which side of the diver was the front.

"Pivot around your body axis," Ritter said. "This prevents the shark from coming at your from behind, like it wants to." 

SEE ALSO: Killer whales feast on the livers of great white sharks — just one orca sighting can keep the sharks away for a year

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This hospital is dressing babies born during Shark Week in adorable Baby Shark onesies

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An Ohio hospital is dressing babies born during Shark Week in adorable Baby Shark onesies.

The Christ Hospital Health Network, in Cincinnati, is giving out onesies inspired by the viral song in a partnership with the nearby Newport Aquarium.

The teal onesie features a smiling cartoon shark happily singing the words "Baby Shark! Do do do do do do," from the hit children's song.

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"The mommy shark and daddy shark will also receive two free tickets to Newport Aquarium to experience their Shark Summer," Bo McMillan, a spokesperson for the hospital, told INSIDER.

The hospital is also activating Baby Shark Snapchat filters at The Christ Hospital's Mt. Auburn and Liberty Township birthing centers, as well as the Newport Aquarium, McMillan added.

Additionally, social media contests will take place throughout the week for Baby Shark swag.

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Read more: Build-A-Bear is selling adorable shark stuffed animals in honor of Shark Week

The Christ Hospital Health Network and the Newport Aquarium shared a video detailing the differences between baby sharks and baby humans.

Some of the differences are scientifically sound, while others are a little more cute than they are accurate. 

"Baby Shark" is a catchy South Korean educational song that captivated millions when it went viral earlier this year. The song was so popular, it made it on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and inspired an upcoming television show.

A number of celebrities, including Cardi B and John Legend, also took to social media to express their love for the tune.

This isn't the first Shark Week promotion we've seen, either. Baby Shark breakfast cereal, Build-A-Bear stuffed sharks, and Shark-themed Vans are all making their debut to celebrate Shark Week.

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Go ahead and celebrate Shark Week with a 267-song playlist of 'Baby Shark' tunes

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baby shark thumb

  • It's Shark Week, which is a big deal for people who enjoy things like nature and also the Discovery Channel.
  • But there's more!
  • Pinkfong, the same group behind the resurgence of "Baby Shark," has cooked up something special. 
  • The educational brand, which creates content geared toward children, has compiled a 267-song playlist of shark tunes on YouTube. 
  • We listened. This is our story.
  • Visit INSIDER's homepage for more.

Good news, sports fans: It's Shark Week! The programming block on the Discovery Channel takes place from July 28 to August 4 this year.

But Shark Week is more than what's on TV.

Over the years, the week of shark-themed entertainment has turned into something of a meme. Perhaps this is thanks to a 2006 episode of "30 Rock" in which Tracy Jordan (Tracy Morgan) implores Kenneth the Page (Jack McBrayer) to "Live every week like it's Shark Week."

The meme, of course, has changed over time, finding a home first on Tumblr and now Twitter. 

And in the year 2019, where the best meme has been about wacky bowling alley screens, it's impossible to talk about Shark Week as a meme without talking about "Baby Shark," a song for children.

 

 

To be more specific, "Baby Shark" was popularized by Pinkfong, a Korean educational entertainment company for children, in 2018. Although the version that is beloved by kids and parents alike these days is probably a little different from the more, ahem, violent version of the song former summer camp attendees might recall which involved amputation and administering CPR, The Week notes.

Read more: Celebrity parents are obsessed with the viciously catchy kids song 'Baby Shark'

But if we can all put our differences aside for just one moment and come together, Pinkfong would like us all to celebrate Shark Week by listening to "Baby Shark." And not just the original, where mommy, daddy, grandpa, and grandma shark go for a swim (doo doo doo doo doo doo).

No, the group compiled a 267-song long playlist of "Baby Shark" uh, remixes, for lack of a better word. The group has promoted it in honor of Shark Week. 

 

Each tune is roughly two minutes and is different, and also somehow, exactly the same. The playlist is 267 videos long. Here are the highlights. 

There's the original flavor — with dancing!

 

"Disco Sharks" is a dance number that boasts full instrumentation.

For a modern twist, EDM sharks are included on the playlist.

 

There's also an ambitious crossover between Johny Johny Yes Papa and "Baby Shark," which is an unforgettable trip down meme memory lane.

"Halloween Sharks," a slowed-down version of the song, serves as a reminder that it's never too early to start planning your Halloween costume

 

 

But the obvious standout is the sped-up version of the original. 

Shark Week only spans seven days, but this playlist lasts forever. Enjoy it in all its glory.

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NOW WATCH: This program in Hawaii lets people snorkel with giant sharks


The movie 'Jaws' was inspired by a real shark: In 1916, New Jersey residents engaged in 'active warfare' with a shark that killed four people

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great white shark

The great white shark of "Jaws" fame, which loses a game of oceanic cat-and-mouse after eating several people, is a legendary Hollywood monster.

The hellish creature didn't come solely from writer Peter Benchley and director Steven Spielberg's imaginations: It was in part based on a shark that killed four people along the New Jersey coastline in 1916.

The spate of attacks that partially inspired "Jaws" culminated in the town of Matawan, where a 10-year-old boy was killed on July 12, 1916, while swimming in an inland creek more than 10 miles away from the nearest ocean bay.

However, the scenario in the 1975 film and the real-life events that inspired it are highly unusual, according to George Burgess, the former director of the Florida Shark Research Program.

"Animal populations, much like humans, sometimes have deranged individuals," Burgess told Business Insider.

In fact, the 1916 attacks were only one of two times in recorded history that a single shark perpetuated multiple attacks on humans, Burgess said. Typically, sharks avoid humans, and the rare cases in which these predators do chomp on a swimmer are usually hit-and-runs.

'Ferocious man-eating sharks'

On July 1, 1916, Charles Vansant was maimed in the water in front of a hotel in Beach Haven, New Jersey. He died as a result of his wounds. Less than a week later, Charles Bruder perished in Spring Lake, just 50 miles up the Jersey Shore. His legless body was pulled from the water. 

shark attack map

Then 10-year-old Lester Stilwell was bitten and dragged under the water while playing with his friends in Matawan Creek. A 24-year-old local, Watson Stanley Fisher, hurried into the creek to look for Stilwell's body, but he, too, was mauled by the shark and eventually died. 

That same day, just a mile downstream, 14-year-old Joseph Dunn was also bitten. He survived the attack.

These third and fourth deaths thrust New Jersey's shark problem into the national spotlight, and marked a turning point in America's collective psyche, according to Burgess: Sharks were no longer just interesting marine animals, they could be killers.

President Woodrow Wilson allotted federal aid to"drive away all the ferocious man-eating sharks which have been making prey of bathers,"the Philadelphia Inquirer reported on July 14, 1916

The Philadelphia Evening Ledger said on July 15 that "the shark menace was formally discussed the day before at a Cabinet meeting in Washington." The newspaper reported that a ship would be dispatched to cooperate with the Coast Guard, and "active warfare against sharks instituted."

Meanwhile, New Jersey fishermen, Coast Guard members, and townspeople threw sticks of dynamite into Matawan Creek and used wire nets to try to capture the offending animal.

Local fishermen ended up catching various shark suspects, including a 215-pound, 9.5-foot-long female shark with 12 babies in her belly.

Finally, New Yorker Michael Schleisser caught and killed an 8-foot, 325-pound great white just a few miles from where Stilwell and Fisher were attacked. The creature had 15 pounds of human remains in its stomach. 

Read More:3 people have been bitten by sharks in Florida over 3 days. Experts share tips for minimizing your risk of a shark attack.

Matawan_Creek_mouth

No further incidents occurred after Schleisser's catch, Burgess said, so most shark experts agree that it was indeed the perpetrator. Some scientists, however, argue that a bull shark could have been responsible, since those sharks prefer brackish water habitats like Matawan Creek more than great whites do. 

Regardless of the species, the 1916 attacks were "a very unusual situation that's unlikely to happen again," Burgess said.

"Most sharks aren't going to be serial killers of humans," he added.

There was only one other known case of multiple attacks by the same shark

Burgess said that in the 50 or so years he's studied sharks, he's aware of just one other incident that involved a series of bites by a single animal. In 2010, the Egyptian government requested Burgess' assistance after a series of attacks on tourists near the Sharm el-Sheikh resort in the Red Sea.

Four people were attacked along the coast there on December 1, and three of the swimmers lost portions of their limbs. Four days later, a shark bit off a German woman's arm while she was snorkeling in the area, and she died.

Oceanic_whitetip_shark_at_Elphinstone_Reef

Using photographic evidence, scientists were able to ascertain that the same oceanic whitetip shark carried out all the attacks, Burgess said. The shark in question had followed a boat from New Zealand that was transporting sheep. As it traveled, the boat had been dumping the livestock's waste, as well as sheep that died along the journey, into the water, so the shark had been getting free food. Once the easy meals dried up, Burgess said, the animal "had to find food in a strange place." 

A shoreline replete with swimming tourists may have been the most promising area to look. 

But sharks don't like to eat humans

In the Universal Studios trailer for "Jaws," here's how the narrator describes the great white shark: "It lives to kill. A mindless eating machine. It will attack and devour anything. It is as if God created the devil and gave him jaws."

great white shark

But that's quite far from the truth, according to Burgess.

"Sharks aren't after humans as a regular prey item," he said, adding that the animals would rather hunt familiar fish and seals.

Imagine, Burgess said, someone "putting some strange dish in front of you for a meal versus your favorite dish and having you choose which one you want." That's the choice sharks face with humans. 

But it's still good to be aware of the inherent risks of swimming in water that we share with sharks, he added. 

"The ocean is a wilderness, not a backyard swimming pool," Burgess said. "It includes animals like sharks, sting rays, and jellyfish that can, and occasionally do, hurt us."

SEE ALSO: Killer whales feast on the livers of great white sharks — just one orca sighting can keep the sharks away for a year

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NOW WATCH: A shark expert says this US coastline could be the next danger zone for great white shark attacks

Before 'Shark Week' and 'Jaws,' World War II taught Americans to fear shark attacks

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US Navy sailors talking on a ship at Corregidor

Summary List Placement

Every summer on the Discovery Channel, "Shark Week" inundates its eager audiences with spectacular documentary footage of sharks hunting, feeding and leaping.

Debuting in 1988, the television event was an instant hit. Its financial success wildly exceeded the expectations of its creators, who had been inspired by the profitability of the 1975 blockbuster film "Jaws," the first movie to earn US$100 million at the box office.

Thirty-three years later, the enduring popularity of the longest-running programming event in cable TV history is a testament to a nation terrified and fascinated by sharks.

Journalists and scholars often credit "Jaws" as the source of America's obsession with sharks. Yet as a historian analyzing human and shark entanglements across the centuries, I argue that the temporal depths of "sharkmania" run much deeper.

World War II played a pivotal role in fomenting the nation's obsession with sharks. The monumental wartime mobilization of millions of people placed more Americans into contact with sharks than at any prior time in history, spreading seeds of intrigue and fear toward the marine predators.

America on the move

World War II Allied prisoners rescued at sea

Before World War II, travel across state and county lines was uncommon. But during the war, the nation was on the move.

Out of a population of 132.2 million people, per the 1940 US Census, 16 million Americans served in the armed forces, many of whom fought in the Pacific. Meanwhile, 15 million civilians crossed county lines to work in the defense industries, many of which were in coastal cities, such as Mobile, Alabama; Galveston, Texas; Los Angeles; and Honolulu.

Local newspapers across the country transfixed civilians and servicemen alike with frequent stories of bombed ships and aircraft in the open ocean. Journalists consistently described imperiled servicemen who were rescued or dying in "shark-infested waters."

Whether sharks were visibly present or not, these news articles magnified a growing cultural anxiety of ubiquitous monsters lurking and poised to kill.

The naval officer and marine scientist H. David Baldridge reported that fear of sharks was a leading cause of poor morale among servicemen in the Pacific theater.

Gen. George Kenney enthusiastically supported the adoption of the P-38 fighter plane in the Pacific because its twin engines and long range diminished the chances of a single-engine aircraft failure or an empty fuel tank: "You look down from the cockpit and you can see schools of sharks swimming around. They never look healthy to a man flying over them."

'Hold tight and hang on'

World War II painting downed pilot sharks PBY Catalina

American servicemen became so squeamish about the specter of being eaten during long oceanic campaigns that US Army and Navy intelligence operations engaged in a publicity campaign to combat fear of sharks.

Published in 1942, "Castaway's Baedeker to the South Seas" was a "travel" survival guide, of sorts, for servicemen stranded on Pacific islands. The book emphasized the critical importance of conquering such "bogies of the imagination" as "If you are forced down at sea, a shark is sure to amputate your leg."

Similarly, the Navy's 1944 pamphlet titled "Shark Sense" advised wounded servicemen stranded at sea to "staunch the flow of blood as soon as you disengage the parachute" to thwart hungry sharks. The pamphlet helpfully noted that hitting an aggressive shark on the nose might stop an attack, as would grabbing a ride on the pectoral fin: "Hold tight and hang on as long as you can without drowning yourself."

The Department of the Navy also worked with the Office of Strategic Services, the wartime precursor to the Central Intelligence Agency, to develop a shark repellent.

Office of Strategic Services executive assistant and future chef Julia Child worked on the project, which tested various recipes of clove oil, horse urine, nicotine, rotting shark muscle and asparagus in hopes of preventing shark attacks.

World War II Navy pilot in life raft waiting for rescue

The project culminated in 1945, when the Navy introduced "Shark Chaser," a pink pill of copper acetate that produced a black inky dye when released in the water — the idea being that it would obscure a serviceman from sharks.

Nonetheless, the US military's morale-boosting campaign was unable to vanquish the glaring reality of wartime carnage at sea. Military media correctly observed that sharks rarely attack healthy swimmers. Indeed, malaria and other infectious diseases took a far greater toll on US servicemen than sharks.

But the same publications also acknowledged that an injured person was vulnerable in the water. With the frequent bombing of airplanes and ships during World War II, thousands of injured and dying servicemen bobbed helplessly in the ocean.

One of the worst wartime disasters at sea occurred on July 30, 1945, when pelagic sharks swarmed the site of the shipwrecked USS Indianapolis.

The heavy cruiser, which had just successfully delivered the components of the Hiroshima atomic bomb to Tinian Island in a top-secret mission, was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine. Out of a crew of 1,196 men, 300 died immediately in the blast, and the rest landed in the water.

As they struggled to stay afloat, men watched in terror as sharks feasted on their dead and wounded shipmates. Only 316 men survived the five days in the open ocean.

'Jaws' has an eager audience

Jaws Universal

World War II veterans possessed searing lifelong memories of sharks — either from direct experience or from the shark stories of others. This made them an especially receptive audience for Peter Benchley's taut shark-centered thriller "Jaws," which he published in 1974.

Don Plotz, a Navy sailor, immediately wrote to Benchley: "I couldn't put it down until I had finished it. For I have rather a personal interest in sharks."

In vivid detail, Plotz recounted his experiences on a search and rescue mission in the Bahamas, where a hurricane had sunk the USS Warrington on Sept. 13, 1944. Of the original crew of 321, only 73 survived.

"We picked up two survivors who had been in the water twenty-four hours, and fighting off sharks," Plotz wrote. "Then we spent all day picking up the carcasses of those we could find, identifying them and burying. Sometime only rib cages … an arm or leg or a hip. Sharks were all around the ship."

Benchley's novel paid little attention to World War II, but the war anchored one of the movie's most memorable moments. In the haunting, penultimate scene, one of the shark hunters, Quint, quietly reveals that he is a survivor of the USS Indianapolis disaster.

USS Indianapolis

"Sometimes the sharks look right into your eyes," he says. "You know the thing about a shark, he's got lifeless eyes, black eyes, like a doll's eyes. He comes at you, he doesn't seem to be living until he bites you."

The power of Quint's soliloquy drew upon the collective memory of the most massive wartime mobilization in American history.

The oceanic reach of World War II placed greater numbers of people into contact with sharks under the dire circumstances of war. Veterans bore intimate witness to the inevitable violence of battle, compounded by the trauma of seeing sharks circle and feed opportunistically on their dead and dying comrades.

Their horrifying experiences played a pivotal role in creating an enduring cultural figure: the shark as a mindless, spectral terror that can strike at any moment, a haunting artifact of World War II that primed Americans for the era of "Jaws" and "Shark Week."

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Janet M. Davis, University Distinguished Teaching Professor of American Studies, The University of Texas at Austin College of Liberal Arts

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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