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Diver used chisel to fight off shark that swallowed his head
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Posted by: forwardone
Diver used chisel to fight off shark that swallowed his head
Bernard Lagan in Sydney
A diver fought off a great white shark that crunched his head and shoulders in its jaws by attacking its eyes with a chisel.
Eric Nerhus, 41, was diving for abalone off the southern New South Wales coast when the three-metre great white struck. It took his head, shoulders and chest into its mouth and crushed his diving mask, smashing his nose.
Dennis Luobikis, who was diving near by during the attack yesterday, said: “He was actually bitten from the head down. The shark swallowed his head.”
Mr Nerhus, a professional diver, told doctors that he fought off the shark by lunging at its head repeatedly with a metal chisel, used to ply abalone off rocks.
After releasing its grip around his head and chest, the shark struck again. It bit his torso, lacerating the diver and shredding the lower part of his wetsuit, before he beat it off again.
With blood oozing from his wounds and his wetsuit in tatters, Mr Nerhus emerged from the weedy, nine-metre (30ft) deep waters off Cape Howe, near the fishing port of Eden. “He came up to the surface shouting, ‘Help, help, there’s a shark, there’s a shark’,” said Mr Nerhus’s son, Mark, 25, who was diving with his father.
“I went over and there was a big pool of red blood. I pulled him out of the water and he was going, ‘Just get me to shore, get me to shore’.”
Divers in another boat gave first aid and one radioed his father, who was flying near by in a shark-spotting plane, to call for help.
Reece Warren, a fisherman who sped Mr Nerhus to shore, said: “He had bite marks all around his chest, on the front and on his back. He said that he was swimming through seaweed and it [the shark] just grabbed him head on.”
Rescuers believe that Mr Nerhus’s lead-lined vest protected him from fatal injury. Most divers use lead weight to submerge but abalone divers use a lead vest rather than a belt. “We’ve always felt the vest would probably help us in a shark attack and this is the first time we’ve had it confirmed,” said Mr Luobikis, a professional diver for 33 years.
The attack came as authorities in Victoria in south eastern Australia scoured the coastline for a huge shark — reported to be about five metres long — that had been seen repeatedly near a women’s surf lifesaving competition.
Last month a 15-year-old boy lost part of his leg to a shark that attacked him while he was surfing near Esperance in Western Australia and another man had his leg bitten off while surfing at Bells Beach in Victoria.
Between 1995 and 2005, Australia reported 74 shark attacks, second only to Florida, according to International Shark Attack, a monitoring group based in the United States.
Victims... and survivors
1916 Between July 1 and 12 , five swimmers were attacked by sharks along a 50-mile stretch of the New Jersey Atlantic coastline. The only survivor was 12-year-old Joseph Dunn
1945 After delivering the first operational atomic bomb, the USS Indianapolis was sunk by Japanese torpedoes and 900 sailors jumped into the water. Shark attacks began at sunrise and went on until 316 survivors were pulled from the water four days later
1993 Dawn Schaumann, a lifeguard, survived with her unborn child after a shark attacked her 100 yards from the Florida shore
2003 Teenager Bethany Hamilton lost her left arm in an attack by a 14ft tiger shark in Hawaii. Weeks later she was surfing again and now competes professionally
2004 J. P. Andrew, 17, lost his leg in an attack while surfing off Muizenberg beach in Cape Town. The limb was washed up four days later
Timesonline
Posted by: golddust
Of all the shark survival stories I have read about, this one gets the prize. No doubt the lead vest helped to save his life, but to have the ability to fight as he did being in the mouth of a shark is incredible. Once again, truth stranger than fiction.