A scuba diver who came face-to-teeth with a shark used a camera to fend off the animal when it came at him with its teeth bared - and he has the frightening video to prove it.
Scott MacNichol, 30, was shaken up but uninjured after a porbeagle shark apparently mistook his camera equipment for food Saturday. MacNichol was diving near Eastport, off the eastern tip of Maine. He estimated the shark was 8 feet long (2.4 meters) and weighed about 300 pounds (136 kilograms).
MacNichol saw the shark swimming above him while he was filming the ocean floor under empty salmon pens as part of an environmental assessment for Cooke Aquaculture Inc.
The animal then came at him, jabbing at the camera with its snout. In the video, its sharp teeth fill the frame before it swims off. MacNichol said he was petrified at the animal's behaviour and screamed underwater. Porbeagles are coldwater sharks that have a similar body shape and tail to mako and great white sharks. Their diet is primarily herring, mackerel and other bony fish.
The shark was probably drawn to MacNichol from the camera's light, batteries and silver casing, said Chris Heinig, owner of MER Assessment Corp., who was on the dive boat on the surface when the shark lunged at MacNichol. He said he didn't think the shark had attacked MacNichol, he was simply curious.
While hundreds of shark attacks have occurred in Florida, California and other warm-water states, they are rare in New England. The last fatal shark attack in New England was in 1936, when a boy died after being attacked in Massachusetts, according to the International Shark Attack File at the University of Florida's Museum of Natural History, which tracks shark attacks.
Shark attack caught on camera
13:57 GMT 29.10.2010 (Updated: 19:52 GMT 19.10.2022)
© RIA Novosti
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A scuba diver who came face-to-teeth with a shark used a camera to fend off the animal when it came at him with its teeth bared - and he has the frightening video to prove it.