SOLANA BEACH, Calif., April 29, 2008

Autopsy Says Great White Shark Killed Man

Triathlete Bled To Death After Attack At San Diego Beach

    • Doug Murcer, left, and Patrick Scolnick, both from Mammouth Lakes, Calif., climb the stairs from Tide Beach in Solana Beach, Calif. after surfing Monday, April 28, 2008. The area is where a shark attacked and killed a swimmer last week. The paired said they were somewhat leery but not actually too afraid to surf.

      Doug Murcer, left, and Patrick Scolnick, both from Mammouth Lakes, Calif., climb the stairs from Tide Beach in Solana Beach, Calif. after surfing Monday, April 28, 2008. The area is where a shark attacked and killed a swimmer last week. The paired said they were somewhat leery but not actually too afraid to surf.  (AP)

    • People play in the water near a sign warning of danger at Cardiff State Beach in Encinitas, Calif. Friday, April 25, 2008. A shark believed to be a great white killed a 66-year-old swimmer Friday as the man trained with a group of triathletes in nearby Solana Beach, Calif.

      People play in the water near a sign warning of danger at Cardiff State Beach in Encinitas, Calif. Friday, April 25, 2008. A shark believed to be a great white killed a 66-year-old swimmer Friday as the man trained with a group of triathletes in nearby Solana Beach, Calif.  (AP Photo/Denis Poroy)

    • Dr. David Martin (right, in a family photo), a retired veterinarian and triathlete, was killed in a shark attack Friday.

      Dr. David Martin (right, in a family photo), a retired veterinarian and triathlete, was killed in a shark attack Friday.  (AP Photo/Martin Family)

    • San Diego County Sheriff's officers keep the beach clear of swimmers, Friday, April 25, 2008 in Solana Beach, Calif.

      San Diego County Sheriff's officers keep the beach clear of swimmers, Friday, April 25, 2008 in Solana Beach, Calif.  (AP Photo/Sandy Huffaker)

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  • Play CBS Video Video Beaches Closed After Attack

    Beaches along a stretch of the coast near San Diego remain closed after the first deadly shark attack in California in nearly four years, Ben Tracy reports.

  • Video Shark Attack Closes Beach

    A San Diego beach has closed after a great white shark attacked a 66-year-old tri-athlete while he was swimming with teammates. Sandra Hughes reports.

(AP)  A shark expert says an autopsy has confirmed a great white killed a triathlete in the waters off San Diego County last week.

An investigator from the Medical Examiner's Office says two shark's tooth fragments were recovered from David Martin's body.

Los Angeles-area shark expert Ralph Collier assisted with the autopsy. He said Monday the fragments indicate the shark was a great white 15 to 16 feet long.

Martin, was bitten Friday morning while training for a triathlon. The 66-year-old quickly died from blood loss.

Martin, a retired veterinarian, was the first shark fatality in San Diego County since 1994. Prior to that, the last known fatal attack in the area was in 1959.

The beach reopened Saturday and authorities kept watch Saturday over a stretch of Southern California beaches, scanning the waters for a shark they believe killed a triathlete a day earlier.

Experts said the likelihood of finding the shark that attacked Martin was slim.

Sharks are rare in the water off Southern California, though female great white sharks sometimes come south from their usual territory in the cooler waters of the central and northern coast to pup. Few make the mistake of attacking humans instead of seals or sea lions, their usual prey.

"It's just very bad luck for that one man," said Richard Rosenblatt, a professor emeritus of marine biology at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego.

Rosenblatt said he believed the bite pattern on Martin's legs indicated the shark was almost certainly a great white that may have been 12 feet to 17 feet long. The sharks, the largest ocean predators, can weigh up to 5,000 pounds, according to National Geographic.

The attack was unusual because it took place over a sandy bottom, Rosenblatt said. Sharks typically attack over rocks, which provide better camouflage.

Solana Beach is 14 miles northwest of San Diego.

Earlier this year, stories of shark sightings swept the coast from San Diego County north through Orange and Los Angeles counties, the Los Angeles Times reported in late March.

The state's last fatal shark attack took place on Aug. 15, 2004, off the coast of northern California's Mendocino County, according to data from the state Department of Fish and Game. The victim was a man diving for shellfish with a friend. On Aug. 19, 2003, a woman swimmer was killed by a great white at Avila Beach in San Luis Obispo County on the central California coast.

Overall, shark attacks are extremely rare. There were 71 reported worldwide last year, up from 63 in 2006. Only one attack, in the South Pacific, was fatal, according to the University of Florida.

The university's International Shark Attack File has counted an average of 4.1 people killed by sharks annually worldwide in the past seven years.


© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by staticblonde April 30, 2008 1:56 AM EDT
and the shark didn''t eat him because sharks don''t think of us as food. the guy was in a black wet suit and prolly looked like a seal, which sharks do think of as food...
Reply to this comment
by staticblonde April 30, 2008 1:53 AM EDT
To everyone that doesn''t understand why they had to investigate, it''s because they needed to know what kind of shark bit him, not what killed him!
They needed to know what to be keeping an eye out for!
my goodness some people are STUPID!
Reply to this comment
by dowjones20k April 29, 2008 9:31 PM EDT
Boy ... this Dr.''s head must be big as a basketball ... now that CBS has devoted a web story to his confirmation ...

I beleive the police confirmed the man was killed because of the great white shark ..

So now we have the facts ....

Thank goodness for CBS and the facts ...
Reply to this comment
by fibonacci_ April 29, 2008 7:27 PM EDT
Why didnt the shark eat him?
Reply to this comment
by johnstossel April 29, 2008 3:32 PM EDT
Ya think???
Reply to this comment
by passerby2 April 29, 2008 2:28 PM EDT
reallY?? the shark killed him? No way?
Reply to this comment
by extremophil April 29, 2008 2:24 PM EDT
A surfer is tossed into the air, his legs are gone, he bleeds to death, and shark teeth are found lodged in his body. I wonder how many California pathologists it took to figure out how he died?
Reply to this comment
by battleroaron April 29, 2008 2:21 PM EDT
this autopsy was sure neccessary, i mean no-one could tell he had been attacked by jaws, and none of the witnesses were credible evidently....!!! so we wasted taxpayers dollars to see what caused this fella to die.
Reply to this comment
by mike71067 April 29, 2008 1:59 PM EDT
Oh that shark has
pretty teeth, dear
and he shows them
pearly whiiiiite
Reply to this comment
by prinzowhales April 29, 2008 1:34 PM EDT
Obviously, al Qaeda is training the beasts, the devil who runs Homeland Security should immediately raise the security alert level from Lemon Yellow to Orange-Orange and have a bowl of Trix so he can keep that ''death warmed over'' look that he cultivates so well.
Reply to this comment

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