Clouds formed by small white particles are frequent in the Bahamas Sea. Suspended particles form bright lines that have also been detected from space and can cover 200 square kilometers of surface. Locals claim that the lines are produced by fish, but there are few fish in the region where clouds form.
However, some researchers believe that they are formed by precipitation of calcium carbonate in specific conditions. But researchers at the Palisades Observatory in New York believe that water chemistry cannot sustain this theory. Precisely, while trying to verify the theory of calcium carbonate, they focused on the sharks that inhabit the region. They believe that behind the clouds there may be sharks, that is, sharks raise sea sediments as hunting techniques. In fact, sharks can be oriented with electric fields, but not with the dam. Obsessed by defeated sediments, becomes an easy hunt