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Surfer ‘mauled in Australia shark attack’

"As a result of the impact, the board has snapped. The injured victim has gone into the air and then re-entered the water," police said in a statement. "He has told police the shark began to circle and then turned away."

In this photo from Jan. 24, 2017, provided by Chris Hasson, 10-year-old Eden Hasson, Chris' son, surfs near what is believed to be a great white shark at Samurai Beach, Port Stephens, Australia. James Cook University shark researcher Andrew Chin says the photographed shark is possibly a small great white. (Chris Hasson via AP)

A surfer was thrown into the air and his board snapped in a suspected great white shark attack off Australia’s east coast on Sunday that left him with bloody cuts to his right hip. The man, named in local media at Abe McGrath, was surfing at Iluka in New South Wales early on Sunday when his board was hit from below by what he assumed was a shark, police said.

“As a result of the impact, the board has snapped. The injured victim has gone into the air and then re-entered the water,” police said in a statement.

“He has told police the shark began to circle and then turned away.”

McGrath’s friend Bryce Cameron said he was “pretty much the luckiest man on earth right now”, with the marine predator suspected to be a great white.

“He got a good look at it. He said it was a 3.5-metre (11.5-foot) white pointer. In the big scheme of things that is a juvenile but it is still big enough to kill,” Cameron told Brisbane’s Courier Mail.

“Abe was left floating in the water with a couple of teeth marks on his body. He scrambled in the water and got washed in by the next wave.”

The attack took place at Iluka’s Main Beach in northern New South Wales.

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The area’s coastline was the site of a spate of attacks in 2015, with authorities trialling shark nets and increasing tagging of the creatures.

There have been 10 encounters off the nation’s vast coastline this year, including the death of a 17-year-old girl mauled by a shark in full view of her parents in Western Australia.

Experts say incidents are increasing as water sports become more popular and baitfish move closer to shore, but fatalities remain rare.

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