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Uncategorized Thursday, December 27th 2012 at 11:30 am

33-Ton Mall Aquarium Explodes, Sends Glass Shrapnel and Sharks Everywhere

Fifteen people were injured last week when a 33-ton aquarium exploded in the middle of a Shanghai shopping center. The injuries sustained are reported mainly as cuts from the shattered glass, and not from, as one would suspect, sharks. The aquarium was installed two years ago, and had been a popular attraction at the mall until it exploded, spilling fish, turtles, and sharks into the shopping center. That tends to drive down foot traffic.

The tank at the Shanghai Orient Shopping Center was seven meters long, three meters high, and had 15-centimeter-thick acrylic glass. An investigation is underway as to what caused the tank to burst, but it’s believed that a drastic drop in temperature was responsible. It can’t be said definitively if this was a deliberate attack by the sharks against mankind, but it clearly can’t be ruled out.

Of the 15 people injured, eight were customers while the other seven were employees of the shopping center including shop workers and security personnel. None of the human injuries were serious, but three sharks as well as dozens of fish and turtles died as a result of the tank exploding.

Closed-circuit television cameras in the shopping center were able to capture the tank exploding on video:

According to the shopping center’s management, there are no plans to rebuild the shark tank. That’s probably a good idea. Malls are probably not the best places for shark tanks.

(via Russia Today, image via mentalblock_DMD)

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  • JD

    Why give only 2 dimensions? The tank is described as: “… seven meters long, three meters high, and had 15-centimeter-thick acrylic glass.”

    How wide was it? Or was this one of those “flat-screen” aquariums? One-dimensional journalists are not good at describing 3-dimensional objects.

  • http://www.facebook.com/LizMustique Elizabeth Clayton

    I am sure the sharks and turtles never wanted to be there and they have died as a result of man’s vanity. Why does this article not mention them? This is yet another example of why we should not keep animals captive for our entertainment.

  • Anonymous

    Let’s pretend we’re just talkin’ about water here:

    1 short ton of water in gallons is:

    1gal/6.33 lbs x 2000 lbs/ton = 300 gal/short ton

    33 short ton aquarium explosion yields about 9,900 gallons of water.

    One gallon is a unit of volume equal to:

    231 cubic inches, which is a cube about 6 inches on a side.

    So 9,900 gallons of water takes up about. . . 2,286,900 inches. And he said it was like, what, 21ft long? Something like that? This requires more math, but it’s all there.

    You know, kind of. Use your imagination! *rainbow*

  • Anonymous

    Knock knock knock…who’s there? “Land Shark”

  • http://geekosystem.com/ Glen Tickle

    Don’t be snide, JD. The part of the tank that exploded measured with the dimensions given. The source didn’t mention depth, or whether the tank was rectangular.

  • http://geekosystem.com/ Glen Tickle

    From the article, “None of the human injuries were serious, but three sharks as well as
    dozens of fish and turtles died as a result of the tank exploding.”

    They were mentioned.