02/27/2006 Nikky Raleigh (Hawaii)
Posted: Tue Apr 18, 2006 9:56 pm
Girl bit by shark in shallow South Maui waters
The attack was near where a shark-bitten body was found last week
Rosemarie Bernardo
rbernardo@starbulletin.com
A 15-year-old girl was taken to Maui Memorial Medical Center after a shark bit her as she stood in shallow water at a popular South Maui beach yesterday, according to police.
About 4:49 p.m., the Kihei resident was standing in about one to three feet of water with two male friends, ages 15 and 17, near the second entrance of Makena Big Beach, when she started screaming, according to police. She had suffered a shark bite to her right calf and her two friends told officers that they saw a gray shark estimated at 5-to-7 feet long, police said.
The water was murky and the skies were cloudy at the time, witnesses told police.
Police said one of her friends grabbed the girl and took her to shore. Police were called while a beachgoer attempted to stop the bleeding before paramedics arrived.
The girl was taken by ambulance to Maui Memorial Medical Center for treatment of the non-critical injury.
Police evacuated the beach and notified the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the attack.
Last week, the DLNR closed a three-mile stretch of beach in the same area after the shark-bitten body of a California free-diver was found off-shore of Makena Landing. A preliminary autopsy indicated that Anthony Moore, 45, of San Jose, Calif., may have been dead before his body was bitten by a shark. But Maui police said it will take more time to determine a specific cause of death.
John Naughton, marine biologist of the National Marine Fisheries Service, said they are still gathering information on what attacked the 15-year-old girl.
“If it was a shark that bit her, it was considerably smaller than the one feeding on the remains of the diver. The other shark was probably a tiger shark,” Naughton said.
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The Associated Press contributed to this report.
http://starbulletin.com/breaking/breaking.php?id=4228
The attack was near where a shark-bitten body was found last week
Rosemarie Bernardo
rbernardo@starbulletin.com
A 15-year-old girl was taken to Maui Memorial Medical Center after a shark bit her as she stood in shallow water at a popular South Maui beach yesterday, according to police.
About 4:49 p.m., the Kihei resident was standing in about one to three feet of water with two male friends, ages 15 and 17, near the second entrance of Makena Big Beach, when she started screaming, according to police. She had suffered a shark bite to her right calf and her two friends told officers that they saw a gray shark estimated at 5-to-7 feet long, police said.
The water was murky and the skies were cloudy at the time, witnesses told police.
Police said one of her friends grabbed the girl and took her to shore. Police were called while a beachgoer attempted to stop the bleeding before paramedics arrived.
The girl was taken by ambulance to Maui Memorial Medical Center for treatment of the non-critical injury.
Police evacuated the beach and notified the Department of Land and Natural Resources of the attack.
Last week, the DLNR closed a three-mile stretch of beach in the same area after the shark-bitten body of a California free-diver was found off-shore of Makena Landing. A preliminary autopsy indicated that Anthony Moore, 45, of San Jose, Calif., may have been dead before his body was bitten by a shark. But Maui police said it will take more time to determine a specific cause of death.
John Naughton, marine biologist of the National Marine Fisheries Service, said they are still gathering information on what attacked the 15-year-old girl.
“If it was a shark that bit her, it was considerably smaller than the one feeding on the remains of the diver. The other shark was probably a tiger shark,” Naughton said.
---
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
http://starbulletin.com/breaking/breaking.php?id=4228