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...packed with calories. People are too scrawny, which is why, after taking a first bite--perhaps because a human, especially one wearing a black wet suit and flippers, looks something like a seal--a great white will usually turn up its nose at whatever remains. Most other shark attacks are probably also cases of mistaken identity: a swimmer's flapping feet and hands may look like the movements of a fish darting through the water...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UNDER ATTACK | 8/11/1997 | See Source »

While marine biologists like Klimley and Holland are trying to unravel the mysteries of sharks' behavior and their role in the marine food chain, immunologists and physiologists are attempting to understand the animals' biochemistry. The idea that sharks can actually be beneficial to human health was established decades ago: vitamin A came primarily from shark-liver oil until 1947, when it was first synthesized in the laboratory. The unctuous liquid is also, for reasons still unknown, highly effective in shrinking human hemorrhoids...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UNDER ATTACK | 8/11/1997 | See Source »

...knows why. One clue may be that the chemical squalamine, found in the stomach, liver and gallbladder of the dogfish, can inhibit the growth of human brain tumors. Sharks also have a primitive but highly active immune system, which may play a role. Their resistance to cancer, however, has nothing to do with their cartilage, despite extravagant claims by people who peddle shark-cartilage pills. While the cartilage has proved promising as an ingredient in temporary artificial skin for burn patients, no proof whatever exists that it can prevent tumors in humans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UNDER ATTACK | 8/11/1997 | See Source »

Assertions that it does are based on a tiny grain of scientific truth. Shark cartilage--and cow cartilage, for that matter--does contain minute quantities of a compound that inhibits blood-vessel growth, and tumors depend on the rapid growth of internal blood vessels that can feed them. But this substance is locked up in the cartilage and doesn't leak out to the rest of the body. To extract it, scientists have to soak huge amounts of cartilage in harsh chemicals for weeks at a time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UNDER ATTACK | 8/11/1997 | See Source »

Nevertheless, shark cartilage is hot, and sharks are being slaughtered wholesale to produce it; a single processing plant in Costa Rica reportedly turns 235,000 sharks into cartilage pills every month. Sharks are also taken by the millions for their fins--a practice that scientists and conservationists find especially disturbing. Often the fins are hacked off and the sharks are thrown back into the water, alive but mortally wounded, to bleed to death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UNDER ATTACK | 8/11/1997 | See Source »

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