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Mosquitoes kill more people every day than sharks do in a . . . Indeed, as the below chart shows, mosquitoes kill more people every day than sharks have in an entire century Image: Gates Notes A report released earlier this year also suggests that climate change is only going to make the problem worse
State of the Global Market for Shark Products | The Fish Site Shark meat While global trade in shark fins appears to have decreased slightly since the early 2000s, global trade data show the trade in shark meat expanding steadily over the last decade or so, and the latest FAO official figure of 121 641 tonnes ($379 8 million) of chondrichthyan meat imported in 2011 represents an increase of 42 per cent
Megalodon: The truth about the largest shark that ever lived For nearly 20 million years the enormous shark dominated the oceans until becoming extinct just 3 6 million years ago O megalodon was not only the biggest shark in the world, but one of the largest fish ever to exist A 2025 study, written by 29 fossil shark experts, found that megalodon may have grown up to 24 3 metres long
Sharks! What Lies Behind Our Fear of Them? - Psychology Today Where the Cape is concerned, one of the area's 3 million summer visitors was indeed killed by a shark five years ago, but the previous fatal attack was in 1938, and no one has died from a shark
Orca - Wikipedia Dorsal fins also exhibit sexual dimorphism, with those of males about 1 8 m (5 ft 11 in) high, more than twice the size of the female's, with the male's fin more like an elongated isosceles triangle, whereas the female's is more curved [42] In the skull, adult males have longer lower jaws than females, as well as larger occipital crests [43]
12 Shark Facts That May Surprise You | NOAA Fisheries Even though sharks don't have bones, they still can fossilize As most sharks age, they deposit calcium salts in their skeletal cartilage to strengthen it The dried jaws of a shark appear and feel heavy and solid; much like bone These same minerals allow most shark skeletal systems to fossilize quite nicely