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Books > Sport & Leisure > Natural history, country life & pets > Wild animals > Aquatic creatures > General
Powerful and mysterious, sharks inspire both fascination and fear.
Worldwide, oceans are home to some five-hundred species, and of
those, fifty-six are known to reside in or pass through the waters
off the coast of both North and South Carolina. At any given time,
waders, swimmers, and surfers enjoying these waters are frequently
within just one-hundred feet of a shark. While it's unnerving to
know that sharks often swim just below the surface in the shallows,
Clay Creswell, a shark-bite investigator for the Shark Research
Institute's Global Shark Attack File, explains that attacks on
humans are extremely rare. In 2019 the International Shark Attack
File confirmed sixty-four unprovoked attacks on humans, including
three in North Carolina and one in South Carolina. While
acknowledging that they pose real dangers to humans, Creswell
believes the fear of sharks is greatly exaggerated. During his
sixteen-year association with the Shark Research Institute, he has
investigated more than one hundred shark-related incidents and has
maintained a database of all shark-human encounters along the
Carolina coastlines back to 1817. Creswell uses this data to expose
the truth and history of this often-sensationalized topic. Beyond
the statistics related to attacks in the Carolina waters, Sharks in
the Shallows offers a history of shark-human interactions and an
introduction to the world of shark attacks. Creswell details the
conditions that increase a person's chances of an encounter,
profiles the three species most often involved in attacks, and
reveals the months and time of day with the highest probability of
an encounter. With a better understanding of sharks' responses to
their environment, and what motivates them to attack humans, he
hopes people will develop a greater appreciation of the invaluable
role sharks play in our marine environment.
The labor of turtle hunters and the shaping of Caribbean history.
Illuminating the entangled histories of the people and commodities
that circulated across the Atlantic, Sharika D. Crawford assesses
the Caribbean as a waterscape where imperial and national
governments vied to control the profitability of the sea. Crawford
places the green and hawksbill sea turtles and the Caymanian
turtlemen who hunted them at the center of this waterscape. The
story of the humble turtle and its hunter, she argues, came to play
a significant role in shaping the maritime boundaries of the modern
Caribbean. Crawford describes the colonial Caribbean as an Atlantic
commons where all could compete to control the region's diverse
peoples, lands, and waters and exploit the region's raw materials.
Focusing on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Crawford traces
and connects the expansion and decline of turtle hunting to matters
of race, labor, political and economic change, and the natural
environment. Like the turtles they chased, the boundary-flouting
laborers exposed the limits of states' sovereignty for a time but
ultimately they lost their livelihoods, having played a significant
role in legislation delimiting maritime boundaries. Still, former
turtlemen have found their deep knowledge valued today in efforts
to protect sea turtles and recover the region's ecological
sustainability.
During the 1950s, 60s, and early 70s, California's coast seemed
awash in abalone. From San Diego to Crescent City, people feasted
on abalone steaks and glimmering shells were sold in trinket shops.
Abalones' remarkable abundance and appeal made them icons of
California's easy-living, laid-back beach culture. But just a few
decades later, many younger Californians had never seen the
legendary mollusk. In the past twenty years, two of California's
seven abalone species have joined the U.S. Endangered Species list,
and even the hardiest now faces the ecological collapse of its home
habitat in Northern California - long regarded as a sure
stronghold. After more than 70 million years of gripping
tenaciously to North America's western shoreline, how - in our time
- did the fate of the delicious, wondrous, and once abundant
abalone become so precarious?
Part One, the inaugural volume in the Fishes of the Western North
Atlantic series, describes lancelets, hagfishes, lampreys, and
sharks. Specialist authorships of its sections include detailed
species descriptions with keys, life history and general habits,
abundance, range, and relation to human activity, such as economic
and sporting importance. The text is written for an audience of
amateur and professional ichthyologists, sportsmen, and fishermen,
based on new revisions, original research, and critical reviews of
existing information. Species are illustrated by exceptional black
and white line drawings, accompanied by distribution maps and
tables of meristic data. Distributed for the Yale Peabody Museum of
Natural History
The Fishes of the Western North Atlantic series, which began
publication in the 1940s by Yale University's Sears Foundation for
Marine Research, was from its beginnings conceived to synthesize
and make accessible the wealth of information in widely scattered
published accounts of the fish fauna of the region for both the
layman and the specialist, presenting critical reviews rather than
compilations. These reference works are still considered valuable
and of interest today to both general audiences and the academic
community. As described in the Preface to the first volume, the
series was "written on the premise that it should be useful to
those in many walks of life-to those casually ... interested ...,
to the sportsman ..., to the fisherman ..., as well as to the
amateur ichthyologist and the professional scientist." These books
remain authoritative studies of the anadromous, estuarine, and
marine fishes of the waters of the western North Atlantic from
Hudson Bay southward to the Amazon, ranking as primary references
for both amateurs and professionals interested in fishes, and as
significant working tools for students of the sea.
Misterios dos monstros do rio profundos, algumas pessoas vivem em
casas flutuantes, todos os dias em movimento.Este grande e profundo
rio nao desiste de seus segredos facilmente.Nas aguas escuras e
turvas, ha perigos ocultos, tais como o jacare, a sucuri e pir
The story of a brutal shark attack that cost a woman her arm and
much of her leg, and her death-defying recovery. One of the most
dreadful experiences humans fear is a shark attack. This horrifying
agony is exactly what happened to Nicole Moore, a nurse from
Orangeville, Ontario. It was an assault all the more brutal for
being so unlikely — she was standing in waist-deep water at a
Mexican resort. She came very close to dying, losing 60 percent of
her blood from deep bites on her arm and leg, and was rushed to a
hospital where she received a questionable level of medical care
that left her and her family confronting physical and mental
anguish. Surviving gruesome misery, including the amputation of her
left arm and attempts to rebuild her disfigured leg, she has fought
on to become a source of inspiration for those facing seemingly
insurmountable challenges.
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