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2 bull sharks swam up Mississippi River to St. Louis, study finds


2 bull sharks swam up Mississippi River to St. Louis, study finds
By Skyler Rivera
2 bull sharks swam up Mississippi River
The researchers confirmed those two sightings but besides them, the sighting record in the United States was littered with incomplete reports.
Two bull sharks, which are native to the Gulf of Mexico, made their way up to St. Louis by swimming up the Mississippi River separately in 1937 and 1995, a recent study confirmed.
In the study, published in the Marine and Fishery Sciences, Cincinnati Museum Center paleontologist Ryan Shell and Nicholas Gardner, a librarian at WVU Potomac State College, reviewed hundreds of reports of bull shark sightings on the Mississippi River and compared them to archaeological and paleontological evidence of sharks moving through the river. ....

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Two Bull Sharks Swam Up the Mississippi River All the Way to St. Louis


Two Bull Sharks Swam Up the Mississippi River All the Way to St. Louis
The sharks, which are native to the Gulf of Mexico, made their way hundreds of miles upstream.
By
Bull sharks are coastal creatures, but at least two of the animals were able to make it as far inland as St. Louis by swimming up the Mississippi River, according to a team of researchers who looked at the shark’s fossil record and reported sightings over the years.
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The research duo Ryan Shell, a paleontologist at the Cincinnati Museum Center and Nicholas Gardner, a librarian at WVU Potomac State College with degrees in ecology and evolutionary biology scrutinized hundreds of reports of sharks in the Mississippi River and compared those historical records with archaeological and paleontological evidence for bull sharks moving in those waterways in the distant past. Their results were published in the journal Marine & Fishery Sciences. ....

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