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Second was a basking shark
both videos have been discredited as great whites...
Scientists refute great white claims
British shark experts have dismissed claims that an animal seen swimming off the coast of Cornwall is a great white shark.
Two holiday-makers sparked interest in what is becoming an annual spate of ‘great white sightings’ after filming shark activity off St Ives. The first video raised alarm bells because the shark was seen breaching among a pod of dolphins – behaviour often associated with great whites. The second, filmed from a boat, showed a large fin moving through the water.
“I couldn’t tell you what shark it is and nor could any biologist in the world,” Dr Jean-Luc Solandt of the Marine Conservation Society told BBC Wildlife Magazine. Indeed, he and other scientists say it is far more likely that the shark is a mako or porbeagle, which are more commonly found in Cornish waters. “The second footage was definitely a basking shark,” Dr Solandt added. “Anyone who knows anything about sharks will tell you that.”
The conditions off England’s south-west coast would appear to suit the lifestyle of the great white, with warm seas and a plentiful supply of food in the form of seals. And though over the years, there have been many claims of sightings, none of them have ever been confirmed as genuine.
http://www.bbcwildlifemagazine.com/newsRead.asp?id=32626
Second was a basking shark

both videos have been discredited as great whites...
Scientists refute great white claims
British shark experts have dismissed claims that an animal seen swimming off the coast of Cornwall is a great white shark.
Two holiday-makers sparked interest in what is becoming an annual spate of ‘great white sightings’ after filming shark activity off St Ives. The first video raised alarm bells because the shark was seen breaching among a pod of dolphins – behaviour often associated with great whites. The second, filmed from a boat, showed a large fin moving through the water.
“I couldn’t tell you what shark it is and nor could any biologist in the world,” Dr Jean-Luc Solandt of the Marine Conservation Society told BBC Wildlife Magazine. Indeed, he and other scientists say it is far more likely that the shark is a mako or porbeagle, which are more commonly found in Cornish waters. “The second footage was definitely a basking shark,” Dr Solandt added. “Anyone who knows anything about sharks will tell you that.”
The conditions off England’s south-west coast would appear to suit the lifestyle of the great white, with warm seas and a plentiful supply of food in the form of seals. And though over the years, there have been many claims of sightings, none of them have ever been confirmed as genuine.
http://www.bbcwildlifemagazine.com/newsRead.asp?id=32626