They live mostly in coastal areas and can be seen in oceans all around the world. The last thing the people of Massachusetts expected to see in a local salt pond was a great white shark.  A 14-foot great white shark became stranded in a salt pond in the Elizabeth Islands. Although there had been isolated sightings of great white sharks throughout the years, this was the first time many islanders, and even some state authorities, had ever seen one up close. A Youtube channel with the name “jrepnin” uploaded footage of the giant finned predator casually swimming in the shallow water. A bad storm with an unusually high tide opened up this salt pond which let the shark in.  According to a lecture made by the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries, there are more than 5,000 shark reports off the coast of Massachusetts. From the shore, people were taking in the sights. Many people were frantically racing back and forth in order to watch this great white shark and profit from it. The Elizabeth Islands are completely privately owned, and the locals were bothered about the attention generated by the beast.  This poor shark was trapped in the salt pond for about a week. Soon enough professionals found a way to get him out.  Ernie Eldredge, Chatham fisherman says, “We came back with a bunch of people and multiple boats and multiple firehoses and pumps and we started trying to steer it out manually, spraying it in a coordinated effort.” John Chisholm, state shark biologist working with the Division of Marine Fisheries chimes in, “In the end, they used the fire hose and got behind it with the fire hose and they were kind of cattle herding, but it was shark herding. And all of a sudden it decided it was going to leave. We were sitting there in the boat and it came up and it turned right beside us, and it kind of rolled up on its side when it did. It bumped into the side of the boat, and we just kind of reached over and petted it, and off it went.” 

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