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Summer shark sightings continue to spike on East Coast

While shark attacks on humans are rare, sightings have increased off East Coast shores this summer. Two people were recently bitten at South Carolina's Myrtle Beach.

Shark sightings off East Coast shores have continued to spike ahead of the Labor Day holiday. 

Off of Massachusetts Cape Cod beaches, there were eight confirmed sightings and four detections over the past two days. 

According to the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy's Sharktivity app, there were also four detections. 

Web, Warren, Cow and Copy Cat were tracked at nearby buoys, with detections on Sunday at north beach island and Nauset public beach.

MYRTLE BEACH SHARK ATTACKS: 2 BITTEN ON SAME DAY

Down the coast, two swimmers were bitten at South Carolina's Myrtle Beach on Monday. 

A Pittsburgh woman, Karen Sites, needed hundreds of stitches on her arm. 

"I just felt something, I guess, bite me and there was a shark on my arm," she told WPDE-TV.

MASSIVE HAMMERHEAD SHARK CHASES STINGRAYS AS SWIMMERS FLEE ALABAMA BEACH

Another individual suffered a bite to the leg

Previous shark attacks this summer have forced officials to temporarily close beaches.

Still, shark attacks on humans are rare. 

The Florida Museum of Natural History and the University of Florida’s International Shark Attack File reports that 47 unprovoked bites from sharks were reported at beaches in the U.S. last year.

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