![]() ![]() Great white sharks, also known as white sharks, don’t typically travel up the Chesapeake Bay or its tributaries so it’s understandable why so many people were surprised by the pings on OCEARCH’s website and how at least one of the social media posts went viral.īut Tancook didn’t visit the Chesapeake or its tributaries. Social media was abuzz with recent reports of Tancook in a couple of the tributaries of the Chesapeake Bay – on Friday, the shark pinned pretty far up on the James River and later in the weekend, in the mouth of the Wicomico, according to OCEARCH’s website. The death toll from COVID-19 is poised to reach 1 million Americans this week. So shark attacks are not a major risk factor heading into Memorial Day weekend, by comparison.Tancook is the name given to a great white shark by the people at OCEARCH, an organization that puts tracking devices on sharks and provides the ability for people to see where the sharks are in real time. leads the world in unprovoked shark bites with 47 confirmed cases in 2021 (one of whom died), an estimated 31,720 people died in motor vehicle traffic crashes across the country from January through September 2021. And there were 11 shark-related fatalities around the entire world last year.Īnd while the U.S. While shark attacks often spark a media feeding frenzy, in fact, there were only 73 confirmed unprovoked shark bites on people around the world in 2021, according to the Florida Museum of Natural History’s International Shark Attack File, and 39 provoked bites, which is in line with the five-year average of 72 incidents annually between 20. But the largest great whites can hit 20 feet long, with some unconfirmed reports of great whites growing 23 feet long.īut Ironbound and his fellow sharks shouldn’t make folks afraid to ever go in the water again, as the infamous”Jaws” tagline teased. Indeed great whites, which are the world’s largest predatory fish, see males reaching 11 to 13 feet long on average, and females growing 15 to 16 feet long on average, with adult sharks weighing between 4,000 and 7,000 pounds. ![]() ![]() And while he is an impressive specimen, measuring 12 feet, 4 inches long and weighing an estimated 998 pounds, OCEARCH has tagged great whites as long as 17.5 feet and weighing as much as 4,000 pounds. OCEARCH’s chief scientist told CNN that Ironbound is probably around 20 years old. Or they can track other underwater predators that OCEARCH has tagged here, including Rocket, a 1,088-pound tiger shark currently swimming the Pacific between Australia and New Zealand. Shark watchers can keep tabs on Ironbound’s progress with the OCEARCH tracker here. He’s following the migration path that great whites in the Atlantic Ocean make each year summering in the rich feeding grounds found in the northern waters off of Canada, before swimming south again for the winter, sometimes traveling as far as the eastern Gulf of Mexico. ET, pegged him just off North Carolina’s Pamlico Sound. The latest ping, coming Monday, May 9 at 6:12 p.m. ET on April 28, and later popped up in the Atlantic Ocean due east of Philadelphia. But Ironbound’s satellite tag recently pinged that he was near the Jersey Shore, which is notable because this was near the 1916 shark attacks that inspired the book and blockbuster movie “Jaws.” He cruised off the coast of New Jersey at around 10:30 p.m.
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