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The Devil's Teeth: A True Story of Obsession and Survival Among America's Great White Sharks is a non-fiction book about great white sharks by Canadian born journalist Susan Casey. The text was initially published by Henry Holt and Company on June 7, 2005.
Warren White is a financier and embezzler who is known as the "Great White Shark" for his ruthlessness. He avoids imprisonment by pleading insanity and is imprisoned in Arkham Asylum. During a prison riot, Jane Doe locks White in Mr. Freeze's cell. He develops severe frostbite and loses his hair, nose, ears, and several fingers.
Blue Meridian: The Search for the Great White Shark is a 1971 non-fiction nature book by the American author Peter Matthiessen. He writes of a 17-month expedition he undertook with Peter Gimbel to photograph great whites underwater. The book recounts, then, the production of the documentary Blue Water, White Death. [1] [2]
The great white shark is arguably the world's largest-known extant macropredatory fish, and is one of the primary predators of marine mammals, such as pinnipeds and dolphins. The great white shark is also known to prey upon a variety of other animals, including fish, other sharks, and seabirds. It has only one recorded natural predator, the orca.
The great white shark named Jekyll is a juvenile, weighing in at nearly 400 pounds. This species of shark can live up to 70 years, grow up to 21 feet long and weigh up to 4,500 pounds, according ...
Peter Bradford Benchley (May 8, 1940 – February 11, 2006) was an American author. He is best known for his bestselling novel Jaws and co-wrote its movie adaptation with Carl Gottlieb. Several more of his works were also adapted for both cinema and television, including The Deep, The Island, Beast, and White Shark.
A great white shark with a white film covering its body was observed off the coast of Southern California. - Carlos Gauna/The Malibu Artist Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter.
Frosty, a male white shark, pinged in Long Bay between North Myrtle Beach and Myrtle Beach at 10:12 a.m. Dec. 30, 2023, according to the nonprofit Ocearch, an organization that tracks sharks.