By Mark Townsend
The Observer - UK
12-19-4
There was no warning, no trace of the menacing score that accompanied the mythic monster of Jaws. Teenager Nick Peterson could surely not have known what struck him as he stretched on his surfboard last week. The shark's first bite severed his torso, onlookers howled as the blue-green sea off Adelaide turned red with his blood.
Yet it was what happened during the next frenzied moments that has stunned the world's leading shark experts and sparked speculation that nature's sleekest predator, the great white shark, has never been more fearsome.
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Two attacks of such ferocity have never occurred so closely together and both events have raised questions about whether it is possible that after 400 million years the great shark has entered a new stage of development.
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The great white shark has become emblematic of mankind's obsession with monsters. Even now it is capable of stirring up a mythic fear. For, despite vast leaps of knowledge since Jaws was released 30 years ago, no one knows how big they can grow, how long they live or even how many are out there. Yet, although the deaths of Webb and Peterson have served to underline the shark's demonic status, conservationists last week were quick to point out that man rather than the shark is often to blame for the attacks.
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/australia/story/0,12070,1376918,00.html