California surfer injured in shark
attack, beaches closed
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[October 04, 2014]
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A shark
attack that left a surfer injured on the central California coast late
on Thursday has prompted the closure of three public beaches in the area
controlled by Vandenberg Air Force Base, the military installation said
on Friday.
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The surfer suffered lacerations to his knee, and his surfboard was
scraped in the attack by a shark measuring 8 to 10 feet in length,
according to a report by Shark Research Committee President Ralph
Collier, who is investigating the incident.
The base and Collier's report did not say what type of shark was
involved, but local media described it as a great white.
Vandenberg Air Force base, about 160 miles northwest of Los Angeles,
said in a notice that Surf, Minuteman and Wall beaches would remain
closed until late afternoon on Sunday "due to safety
considerations."
The attack occurred in the early evening on Thursday in waters
one-quarter mile north of Wall Beach, the base said.
Despite intense media attention generated by shark attacks on
humans, such incidents are fairly rare along the U.S. Pacific Coast,
with 154 unprovoked attacks authenticated off California since 1900,
according to the Shark Research Committee.
Thirteen fatal shark attacks on people have been documented in
California during the past 60 years , with the two most recent of
those, in October 2010 and October 2012, occurring at Vandenberg's
Surf Beach, the group said.
"More people are killed by toasters than by sharks," said Shark
Research Institute archivist Marie Levine. "Every creature is born
with a menu in its brain. ... Humans are not part of a shark's
menu."
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On the opposite U.S. coast, two women escaped unharmed after a great
white shark attacked their kayak in the waters off Manomet Point in
Plymouth, Massachusetts, earlier this month.
In July, a great white hooked by fishermen on a pier bit a swimmer
along Southern California coast near Manhattan Beach when the man
inadvertently swam into the struggling shark. The man survived with
lacerations to his torso.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting and
writing by Eric M. Johnson from Seattle; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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