Capt. Greg Metzger and Dr. Megan Winton both use a VHF receiver on the boat as the team desperately try to get a signal from Liberty's tag. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0040.jpg
Jack Casey and Dr. Greg Skomal sit next to each other smiling on a pier in Martha Vineyard. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0027.jpg
Jack Casey and Dr. Greg Skomal face each other while they talk on a pier in Martha Vineyard. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0028.jpg
Dr. Megan Winton and Dr. Alisa “Harley” Newton laugh together at the back of the research boat. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0030.jpg
Dr. Megan Winton uses a VHF receiver on the bow of the boat. She tries to get a signal from Liberty's tag. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0033.jpg
Dr. Megan Winton uses a VHF receiver on the bow of the boat. She tries to get a signal from Liberty's tag. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0034.jpg
Dr. Megan Winton just outside the School for Marine Science and Technology in New Bedford, MA just before she sees the analysis of the data from Liberty's tag for the first time. (National Geographic/Zara Tyne)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0035.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger uses a VHF receiver on the boat, as the team desperately try to get a signal from Liberty's tag. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0037.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger uses a VHF receiver on the boat, as the team desperately try to get a signal from Liberty's tag. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0038.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger stands looking out to sea, while using a VHF receiver as the team desperately try to get a signal from Liberty's tag. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0039.jpg
The team's boat floats on the horizon at sunset, fishing rods cast, waiting to catch a baby white shark. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0026.jpg
Dr. Alisa “Harley” Newton stands on the front of the teams boat, preparing a pair of binoculars, to start searching for Liberty's tag. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0041.jpg
Dr. Tobey Curtis and Dr. Megan Winton stand smiling while looking at the data retrieved from Liberty's tag at the School for Marine Science and Technology in New Bedford, MA. (National Geographic/Zara Tyne)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0042.jpg
Dr. Greg Skomal casts his rod on a sunny day, fishing for menhaden just of the shore of Long Island. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0044.jpg
Dr. Greg Skomal, stands reeling in his rod, on a sunny day fishing for menhaden just of the shore of Long Island. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0045.jpg
Dr. Greg Skomal, stands reeling in his rod, on a sunny day fishing for menhaden just of the shore of Long Island. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0046.jpg
Dr. Megan Winton and Dr. Greg Skomal, look at the data retrieved from Liberty's tag in a lab at the School for Marine Science and Technology in New Bedford, MA. (National Geographic/Zara Tyne)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0048.jpg
Dr. Tobey Curtis standing in the lobby of the School for Marine Science and Technology in New Bedford, MA just before showing the rest of the team the analysis of the data from Liberty's tag. (National Geographic/Zara Tyne)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0049.jpg
Dr. Megan Winton and Dr. Greg Skomal, stand looking at the analysis of the data retrieved from Liberty's tag in a lab at the School for Marine Science and Technology in New Bedford, MA. (National Geographic/Zara Tyne)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0050.jpg
Dr. Tobey Curtis is analyzing the data from Liberty's tag in a lab at the School for Marine Science and Technology in New Bedford, MA. (National Geographic/Joseph Brunette)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_UHD_0002.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger after the success of catching a baby great white shark. (National Geographic/James Blake)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_UHD_0003.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger has a baby great white shark on the line and is wrestling to try and bring it on board so the team can tag it. (National Geographic/James Blake)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_UHD_0006.jpg
Greg Skomal while working with local lobstermen to put out special acoustic receivers. Part of a huge network that tracks the movements of sharks and fish along the entire US Atlantic Coast. (National Geographic/James Blake)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_UHD_0008.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger focuses his sight on the water, searching for movement that could be a shark. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0013.jpg
Dr. Alisa “Harley” Newton looks out to sea, hopeful to spot a baby white shark. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0001.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger fishes for menhaden early in the morning, the baitfish used to catch baby white sharks. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0002.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger glances to the water as he reels in menhaden, the baitfish used to catch baby white sharks. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0003.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger and Dr. Tobey Curtis on the boat looking at a map of the Long Island Shore, discussing where the best place to fish might be. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0004.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger drives his research boat out to sea. Concentrating on the temperature of the water, an important factor in the location of baby white sharks, as he goes. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0009.jpg
Capt. Greg Metzger and the team are joined by another fishing boat. They are heading out to sea together to maximize their chances of catching a baby white shark. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0010.jpg
Dr. Alisa “Harley” Newton sits on the back of the boat, eagerly awaiting their first catch. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0011.jpg
Dr. Megan Winton looks out to sea as the team wait for a bite on the line. (National Geographic/Brandon Sargeant)Posted 06/14/24BabySharksInTheCity_0012.jpg