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The dorsal fin of a great white shark pops out of the water near Margaret Bowles in Woods Hole, Mass., on July 4, 2025. WHDH The photo captured Bowles’ terrified expression as the predator’s ...
Margaret Bowles and Maddie Cronin were paddleboarding and taking photos off of Stoney Beach on the Fourth of July when Bowles noticed an alarming dorsal fin. It's the first confirmed sighting of a ...
Margaret Bowles (pictured) and Maddie Cronin were paddleboarding off of Stony Beach in Woods Hole on July 4 when they encountered a white shark in the water. The shark's dorsal fin can be seen on ...
The photo captured Bowles’ terrified expression as the predator’s dorsal fin breached the water’s surface, just feet from Cronin’s board.
AND ADJUNCT SCIENTIST WITH THE NEW ENGLAND AQUARIUM TELLING US BASED OFF THIS PICTURE, THEY WERE ABLE TO DETERMINE IT WAS A GREAT WHITE SHARK, LIKELY A JUVENILE, BASED ON THE SIZE OF THE DORSAL FIN.
Margaret Bowles was paddleboarding off Stoney Beach in Woods Hole with her friend Maddie Cronin when she noticed a concerning dorsal fin poke out of the water. The fin is visible if you zoom into ...
John Chisholm, of the New England Aquarium confirmed that it was a great white — citing its pointed dorsal fin — and estimated that the animal was about the size of the teens' paddleboards.
A 21-year-old man was bit in the leg by a sandbar shark on a Massachusetts beach, and he ended up in the hospital.
Hovering fish aren’t loafing—they burn twice resting energy to make micro-fin tweaks that counteract a natural tendency to tip, and body shape dictates just how costly the pause is. The ...
The world's largest great white shark is being tracked by scientists, and the predator can now be followed LIVE ...
The world's largest great white shark is being tracked by scientists, and the predator can now be followed LIVE ...