From: Sent: Wednesday, September 19, 2018 2:35 PM To: Jeffrey Epstein Subject: Scientists reveal secret White Shark Cafe Is this like shark bur=ing man? So weird https://qz.com/1395042/scient=sts-reveal-secret-white-shark-cafe-in-pacific-ocean/amp/ <https://qz.com/1395042/scientists-reveal-=ecret-white-shark-cafe-in-pacific-ocean/amp/> <=iv id="article" role="article" style="text-rendering: optimizeLegibil=ty; font-family: -apple-system-font; font-size: 1.2em; line-height: 1.5em; m=rgin: Opx; padding: Opx;" class="system exported"> Sc=entists have uncovered a secret "White Shark Cafe" in the m=ddle of the Pacific Ocean =lice Truong <https://qz.com/author/atruongqz/> =/span>1 min=te ago About 1,200 nautical miles=east of Hawaii lies a patch of ocean that researchers had thought to be a d=sert of sorts. But for reasons unknown to them, each winter, great white sh=rks would leave the food-abundant waters along the US and Mexican west coas= for a sojourn in the middle of nowhere. H=ping to uncover the secret lives of the mysterious great white shark, scien=ists at Stanford University and the Monterey Bay Aquarium in California led=an expedition to what's been dubbed the White Shark Cafe <http://www.white=harkvideo.com/white-shark-cafe.html> . Their month=ong journey this past April and May helped them discover this area, roughly=the size of Colorado, is actually teeming with "tiny light-sensitiv= creatures so tantalizing that the sharks cross the sea en masse to reach t=em," reports the San Fran=isco Chronicle <https://www.sfchronicle.com/news/article/Mysterious=great-white-shark-lair-discovered-in-13234068.php> . The waters are also rich in squid, bigeye tuna, blue an= mako sharks, and other fish. <https://cms.qz.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/white-shark-c=fe.png?w=620&strip=all&quality=75> =hitesharkcafe.com <http://whitesharkcafe.com> Lo=ation of White Shark Cafe. Stanford marine scientist Barbara Block had discovered the sharks'=hidden hangout, the largest known congregation of white sharks, 14 yea=s ago after she started attaching tracking tags to the animals. Over the ye=rs, the data collected revealed that like clockwork the great white sharks w=uld go on an annual pilgrimage in December to this area of the Pacific that=satellite imagery had suggested was barren. The tracking tags helped the ex=edition locate the sharks this past spring and track their movements. They a=so revealed unusual diving behavior that isn't entirely understood y=t. During their stay in the Pacific, the s=arks kept to a surprising schedule. In the daytime, they would dive down to=1,400 feet—to an area known as the mid-water that's on the a=ge of complete darkness and is populated by bioluminescent fish—and=ascend to shallower waters, around 650 feet below the surface, every night.=/p> EFTA_R1_01834847 EFTA02624463
"It's the largest migratio= of animals on Earth—a vertical migration that's timed with=the light cycle," Salvador Jorgensen, expedition leader and Montere= Bay Aquarium scientist, told the Chronicle. "During the day they g= just below where there is light and at night they come up nearer the surfare to warmer, more productive waters under the cover of darkness."</=> While it's believed the sharks ventu=ed down to the darkness to hunt for larger fish drawn to the bioluminescenc=, researchers haven't been able to explain another behavior they ob=erved only in male sharks. During April, the males would each travel i= a V-shape pattern as many as 140 times a day. It's unclear if the b=havior is related to mating or if they are hunting for different species of=fish. Scientists hope to gain some clarity after analyzing the data they co=lected. 2 EFTA_R1_01834848 EFTA02624464






