Massive shark tagged by Cape Cod researcher makes shark science history: 'A dream come true'


The nearly 3,000-pound monstrous great white shark tagged by a Cape Cod researcher has really be on the move.

White shark “LeeBeth” has traveled more than 2,000 miles since she was tagged in December — and has now made shark science history.

LeeBeth recently pinged off the coast of Matamoros, Mexico; this is the furthest west a white shark has ever been tracked into the Gulf of Mexico, where many sharks migrate to during the winter months.

“This represents a very historic moment in white shark science,” Atlantic White Shark Conservancy staff scientist Megan Winton said this week, later adding, “It’s huge news from a science perspective.”

Winton was off South Carolina with Outcast Sport Fishing’s Chip Michalove on Dec. 8 for Michalove’s first charter of the season, and they came across the giant shark, which is likely between 25 and 30 years old.

They caught and tagged the estimated 2,800-pound, 14-foot great white female shark off Hilton Head.

“It’s been addicting to watch what this shark is doing,” Michalove said. “I’m picking up my phone every 20 minutes. I’m like a middle schooler looking at the app to try to figure out where’s the next ping going to be.”

“It’s been a dream come true,” he later added.





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