Focus on All Things New England Having trouble viewing this email? [View this email on the web](. [Weekends with Yankee logo]( [Weekends with Yankee]( In Massachusetts, co-host Richard Wiese goes looking for great white sharks with noted marine biologist Greg Skomal. Meanwhile, co-host Amy Traverso heads to a remote corner of Maine to experience The Lost Kitchen, one of the countryâs most sought-after dinner reservations. Then Richard is off to mountain-bike the famed Kingdom Trails in Vermontâs Northeast Kingdom. Back in the kitchen, Amy bakes up Graham Cracker Pie, a recipe from The Lost Kitchen owner Erin French. [New England Shark Lore | History & Pop Culture]( From the first recorded human fatality by a shark to Jaws and frozen sharks in the news, we're looking back at 250 years of New England shark history. On Weekends with Yankee, co-host Richard Wiese spent a day with shark expert Dr. Greg Skomal in Chatham, Massachusetts, to learn more about the tagging and tracking of great white sharks along the Atlantic coast. Hereâs a look back at 250 years of New England shark lore. Thanks to a certain blockbuster movie, sharks and New England are permanently intertwined in the public imagination. But the truth of New Englandâs shark history might surprise you. Here is a brief survey of the history of New England shark attacks and some key moments in the regionâs shark pop culture. [Weekends with Yankee]Sharks, like the great white pictured here, are one of the oldest life-forms on the planet.
Wikimedia Commons Thanks to a certain blockbuster movie, sharks and New England are permanently intertwined in the public imagination. But the truth of New Englandâs shark history might surprise you. Here is a brief survey of the history of New England shark attacks and some key moments in the regionâs shark pop culture. SHARKS IN NEW ENGLAND | HISTORY, ATTACKS & POP CULTURE NEW ENGLAND SHARK ATTACKS | HISTORY & ODDS The first recorded human fatality by shark was noted as having occurred on July 12, 1771, when a fisherman was killed off the coast of Massachusetts Bay. In the 165 years that followed, there were just five more fatalities in all of New England. The last of those occurred on July 25, 1936, when 16-year-old Joseph Troy was bitten by a shark while swimming off Buzzards Bay and died of blood loss during subsequent attempts to amputate his leg. There hasnât been a shark fatality in New England since, and in the years since 1771, fewer than two dozen nonfatal shark bites have been recorded in New England. The most recent of those occurred on July 7, 2016, when Roger Brisson was bitten on the forearm while fishing off Gloucester, Massachusetts. [Weekends with Yankee]Sharks attacks are relatively uncommon in New England waters, and fatalities even more so. The most recent was the death of Joseph Troy in 1936.
New Bedford Standard-Times, July 26, 1936 According to the shark research program at the University of Florida, your odds of dying in a shark attack are roughly one in 3.7 million. To put that in perspective, cows are responsible for 20 times more deaths in the U.S. each year than sharks are. In a January 2017 interview with The Cape Cod Times, however, George Burgess, director emeritus of the University of Florida program, predicted that there will likely be a shark-caused fatality at Cape Cod soon. The issue isnât that the sharks are becoming more dangerous, but rather that human/shark proximity is increasing. Before the middle of the 20th century, very few humans ventured into the cold, choppy waters of the outer Cape. As tourism escalated and cold-water gear improved after World War II, humans started venturing farther and staying in the water longer. And by then, coastal seal populations had been decimated. In 1972, Congress passed the Marine Mammal Protection Act, paving the way for a seal comeback. But as the seals have returned, so too have the sharks that dine on them. Except now there are people in the water, too. Sharks seldom target humans, scientists believe. What happens far more often is that they mistake humans for seals or other more desirable snacks. If it doesnât know what something is, a shark may investigate by taking a nibble. But a shark nibble is a pretty big deal if you are on the receiving end. And now, thanks to Greg Skomal, a shark researcher with the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries, [you can see the process firsthand](. In 2017, Skomal was in the water off Chatham, Massachusetts, with a GoPro camera on a pole when an 11-foot female shark came by to âinvestigate.â [Weekends with Yankee]The 1975 movie Jaws wedded sharks and New England forever in the public imagination. Peter Benchley, who wrote the novel on which the movie is based, has since expressed regret that his work perpetuated negative stereotypes about sharks.
Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain JAWS | THE MOST FAMOUS SHARK IN THE WORLD In 1975, a young movie director named Steven Spielberg transformed a novel by Peter Benchley into the film that not only launched the concept of summer blockbuster movies, but also terrified generations of beachgoers. From composer John Williamsâs ominous two-note tuba theme to the classic, ad-libbed one-liners (âYouâre gonna need a bigger boatâ), Jaws infiltrated popular culture, earned more money than any film that had come before it, and changed our feelings about sharks forever. So why was Jaws set in New England? In Benchleyâs book, a great white shark terrorizes a coastal New York community. For movie purposes, the story was relocated to a fictional Cape Cod island. According to the producers, there were two main reasons for the relocation, neither of which has much to do with actual sharks. The first was that the Cape in those days was seen as âmore middle classâ than Long Island, and so perhaps would be more impacted by a tourism disruption. The far more important reason, though, is that the waters around Marthaâs Vineyard, where primary shooting took place, are shallow for a considerable distance out from land, making the filmâs mechanical sharks easier to operate farther from shore. RECENT NEWS | FROZEN SHARKS ON CAPE COD In the midst of an extreme cold spell during the winter of 2017-2018, [reports]( of frozen sharks washing up dead on Cape Cod beaches made national headlines. Four thresher sharks were found in total. Their deaths were attributed to a combination of an unusually prolonged period of cold weather, the well-known hook-shaped landmass of the Cape, and shallow water. The protrusion of Cape Cod is notorious for disrupting migrations to warmer southern waters. Sharks need to keep moving in order to breathe, so they donât survive long if they get âhookedâ by the Cape and end up trapped on a sandbar. SPONSORS Weekends with Yankee is a production of WGBH Boston and Yankee Magazine and is distributed by American Public Television. [Unsubscribe](
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