Lots of places, South Africa, of the coast of California. Im not sure if you can dive with them but I know that's were they are, but you probably can ;]
only a poorly constructed cage can be destroyed by a shark
No, they used mechanical sharks. The only real shark footage is in the scene where Matt Hooper is in the underwater shark cage. That was filmed with a real great white shark, and a midget or dwarf stunt actor in a miniature cage, to make the shark look bigger.
Depending what you mean on "largest great white shark photos" you can get THE BEST photos on a boat around seal island. Seal is great white shark favorite. The Great whites breech many feet in the air to try to catch them. You can find a breech more than every 5min. If you have a good camera this is a pretty good photo shot. Another spot is Guadalupe Island that is home to many great whites. You can go cage diving there. Guadalupe island is off of mexico.
Shark Cage Diving is when u get in a cage with scuba gear on, they push the cage off with a line attached, and when you get in the water, sharks will come up to u but they cant hurt u because they cant get in.
Extremely unlikely. The worst that could possibly happen is that the cage is torn away from the boat however most of the cages are designed to float and therefore no chance of drowning. Also when you actually go shark diving you will realise that they are pretty much only interested in the fish and very rarely try to attack the cage.
That is incorrect! It was not invented by Jacques Cousteau! Jacques Cousteau co- developed the "Aqua Lung" The first underwater breathing apparatus! The First shark cage was invented by South Australian Great White shark attack survivor Rodney Fox, in Australia!
In the small town of Gansbaai -- about a 2.5-hour drive from Cape Town along the east (Indian Ocean) coast -- you can go underwater in a cage to see the shark known as the Great White. It is also possible to float in a cage in a shark tank with ragged tooth sharks at uShaka Marine World in Durban.
Rodney Winston Fox (born 1940) did. He was attacked in 1963 by a great white and went on to invent the first underwater observation cage in Australia. Jacques Yves Cousteau also 'invented' a shark cage which is shown in his book, The Silent World, co-authored with Frederick Dumas published in 1953. Cousteau's shark cage was used in a film of the same name which won an Academy Award as the Best Feature-length documentary of 1954
cage
yes they do eat tuna fish and whales dolphins and other sharks and lots of other things
Live from a Shark Cage was created on 1999-10-25.
no they cant