"Someone’s going to get bitten."
Although sharks swim up and down our East Coast, there’s something about New Smyrna Beach, a few hours north of South Florida, that spurs them to bite people more than anywhere else.
A database known as The International Shark Attack File has identified Volusia County, home to New Smyrna Beach, as the “Shark Bite Capital of the World.” Researchers have for years been trying to figure out why there are so many human-shark interactions near this small space of beach.
Now, Florida Atlantic University professor Stephen Kajiura says he may have some answers — and he will share them on an upcoming episode of "Investigation Shark Attack."
Read more at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel