Scientists Are Tracking a 1,000-Pound Great White Named ‘Ironbound’

OCEARCH, a nonprofit marine research group that provides open-source data about shark migration, is tracking a 998-pound great white that, on May 10, was swimming off the shores of North Carolina.

OCEARCH is calling the shark “Ironbound” – it’s an adult great white that ​is 12 feet, 4 inches long. OCEARCH first tagged Ironbound in 2019 in Nova Scotia and has been tracking his movements ever since.

Each time the great white’s fin tag breaks the water’s surface, data is sent to OCEARCH, and it can track the shark’s location. A “Z-Ping” can also occur, which indicates a ping with no location data.

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Since first being tagged in Nova Scotia, Ironbound has made his way up and down the eastern seaboard. He has gone as far south as the Florida Keys — nearing the Gulf of Mexico in 2020 and 2021 — and as far north as Halifax, Canada.

On April 28, around 10:30 pm, Ironbound pinged in the waters off the coast of New Jersey.

The latest ping from Ironbound came in at 12:43 pm on May 10 off the coast of North Carolina.

Ironbound isn’t the biggest shark the organization has encountered, Bob Hueter, a chief scientist at OCEARCH, told CNN. Hueter told the network that OCEARCH had tagged great white sharks as long as 17.5 feet and as heavy as 4,000 pounds.

Though Ironbound appears to be taking a detour back south, Hueter said it is common for great white sharks to move north in the spring and early summer.

What do you think?

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  1. Sharks are awesome. Deadly but awesome. Beautiful. But not something that a person can pet. They are just something that a person can look at and be enthralled at their beauty. And at the same time know that they can and will kill you.

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