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Great White Shark Caught Eating Seal Off Cape Cod Beach

Great white shark captured eating seal off Cape Cod near two beaches that were recently closed due to shark sightings.

PROVINCETOWN, MA — A great white shark was captured by a photographer eating a seal Sunday near Cape Cod beaches that were recently closed due to great white sightings.

Peter Flood captured the shark eating a grey seal near Race Point Beach in Provincetown. That beach and Herring Cove Beach, also in Provincetown, were closed Saturday after a great white was seen just feet from the shore near swimmers.

The sighting came days after researchers said they discovered the first-ever great white shark nursery in the North Atlantic, a few miles off of Montauk, N.Y. The discovery explains a surge in great white sightings near Cape Cod in recent years.

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It's been another busy summer of great white shark sightings on the Cape. On Sunday, Aug. 13, Lighthouse Beach in Chatham was closed after a great white shark was seen eating a seal nearby. On Friday, Aug. 5, Truro beaches were closed as six great whites fed on a dead minke whale nearby. In July, boaters credited an app for alerting them to a great white swimming alongside their boat — and a 6-year-old boy actually hooked a great whitein Cape Cod Bay (The shark was cut free.).

Shark attacks on humans are extremely rare — the odds are about one in 12 million. Most shark attack victims survive; bites on humans by sharks are normally exploratory.

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Truro is the site of the last great white attack on a human in Cape Cod. On July 30, 2012, a great white bit a man on the leg. He survived.

The last close encounter in the region was September 2014, when a great white chomped a kayak with two women aboard off the coast of Plymouth. They were not hurt. The sharks might have mistook the kayak for a seal, which they prey on.
In 1916, a shark killed four people and seriously injured a fifth off the New Jersey coast — providing the inspiration for “Jaws,” which was filmed on Martha's Vineyard.

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