What started as a carefree day at Carrum Beach in Melbourne turned eerie after a family photo revealed something chilling. A father and his young daughter were smiling in the clear water, enjoying the sun — but when they looked closer later that night, they noticed a dark, fin-like shape rising just behind them.The photo, taken in 2023, seemed ordinary at first. Yet after being posted online, it spread rapidly across social media, stirring debate and fear. Some believed it showed a shark lurking nearby, while others dismissed it as a trick of light or reflection.
The image resurfaced recently, coinciding with a shark warning issued by SES Chelsea for the same stretch of coastline. The group wrote, “We posted about a shark sighting between Bonbeach and Chelsea. Later, a family sent us this photo — taken earlier that day. It was their child’s first trip to the beach. When they looked later, they noticed something strange in the water. Was this our shark?”
Online reactions were mixed. Skeptics pointed out that the water looked too shallow for a large shark and that the swimmers seemed calm. Others were convinced something dangerous had been lurking beneath the surface.
Marine experts soon offered a scientific explanation. Professor Charlie Huveneers, leader of the Southern Shark Ecology Group, analyzed the image and concluded it was unlikely to be a shark.
“The shape doesn’t resemble a shark’s dorsal fin,” he explained. “It’s more consistent with the wing of a Southern Eagle Ray.”
These rays, often mistaken for sharks, glide gracefully through shallow southern Australian waters. Their curved fins can appear ominous in photos, especially under bright sunlight.
Still, the timing was unsettling — just days earlier, fishermen at Aldinga Beach captured footage of a massive great white circling their boat, reminding everyone how close the wild can be.