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How Should We Respond When Humans and Sharks Collide? (3 Ways You Avoid Shark Bites)
National Geographic ^
| July 4, 2013
| Emily Shenk
Posted on 07/13/2013 7:00:55 PM PDT by nickcarraway
click here to read article
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To: Vince Ferrer
Good. That would have been boring.
To: nickcarraway
I have an agreement with sharks. I don’t go in their water if they don’t come down my street. Of course a sharknado could change all of that.
22
posted on
07/13/2013 8:08:03 PM PDT
by
Hillarys Gate Cult
(Liberals make unrealistic demands on reality and reality doesn't oblige them.)
To: nickcarraway
On the same hike where I found the shark tooth, I walked to a hill top where you could overlook the city of Denver. I looked down at my feet, and found a quarter dated 1898. I always imagine someone in 1898 walking up that same hill, looking over Denver, and then wondering where his quarter went.
To: Hillarys Gate Cult
I’ve eaten enough shark over the years that it would only be fair.
I have no intention of being fair.
24
posted on
07/13/2013 8:11:35 PM PDT
by
null and void
(Republicans create the tools of oppression, and the democrats gleefully use them!)
To: Vince Ferrer
MINE!!! I want it back.
25
posted on
07/13/2013 8:13:42 PM PDT
by
null and void
(Republicans create the tools of oppression, and the democrats gleefully use them!)
To: Vince Ferrer
You should have been an archaeologist.
In 1898, in Denver, a quarter would probably get you meals for a couple days and a place to stay.
To: nickcarraway
The front range in Colorado seems to have been a migration path for dinosaurs walking along the edge of the Gulf of Mexico. I was hiking in a place in the front range and stopped at a ledge overlooking a valley below. On a rock in front of me I saw a dent which collected rain water, and had a puddle of water in it. Then I saw another like it. Then I realized they weren't just dents in the rock, they were footprints. I found two more, and realized that if we were standing here enjoying the view at the same time, I would be directly underneath a big sauropod.
To: Vince Ferrer
Bull sharks can live in fresh water and travel far up rivers. Attacks have occured in rivers.
To: BipolarBob
“This does not address sharknados though.”
Finally, something that unites all Americans.
29
posted on
07/13/2013 9:35:29 PM PDT
by
ari-freedom
(I need to change my tagline.)
To: cripplecreek
http://divethecooper.com/
LOTS of fossilized megaladon teeth....Just gotta stay away from the rivers banks....too many gators!...
Oh yeah, and at slack tide, there are bull sharks coming in from the ocean.
30
posted on
07/13/2013 9:49:54 PM PDT
by
45semi
(A police state is always preceded by a nanny state...)
To: nickcarraway
31
posted on
07/13/2013 9:57:59 PM PDT
by
Joe 6-pack
(Qui me amat, amat et canem meum.)
To: BipolarBob
Woman on their period should not enter the ocean if there is a danger of sharks. This is something I heard from the lifeguards in Hawaii, who all know this bit of folk-wisdom.
32
posted on
07/14/2013 3:03:56 PM PDT
by
Jack Black
( Whatever is left of American patriotism is now identical with counter-revolution.)
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