JIM MCMAHON/MAPMAN ®
In the mid-1990s, visitors and staff at the Carbrook Golf Club began to notice something strange about the lake near the 14th hole. They reported seeing large triangular dorsal fins—like the ones on sharks’ backs—breaking the surface. The club just outside the city of Brisbane, Australia, seemed to have some unexpected guests.
“At first, people didn’t believe what they saw,” says Peter Gausmann. He’s a biogeographer—a scientist who studies the distribution of living things on Earth—at Ruhr University Bochum in Germany. After all, most people assume sharks live in the ocean, not in lakes. For a while, the idea of sea creatures at Carbrook seemed like a myth. But eventually, photos and videos proved that the incredible tales were true: The lake sharks were real.
In the mid-1990s, strange reports came from the Carbrook Golf Club, just outside the city of Brisbane, Australia. Visitors and staff noticed something in the lake near the 14th hole. Large triangular dorsal fins were breaking the surface. They looked like the fins on sharks’ backs. The club seemed to have some unexpected guests.
“At first, people didn’t believe what they saw,” says Peter Gausmann. He’s a biogeographer at Ruhr University Bochum in Germany. He studies the distribution of living things on Earth. Most people assume sharks live in the ocean, not in lakes. For a while, the sea creatures at Carbrook seemed like a myth. But over time, photos and videos proved that the strange tales were true. The lake sharks were real.