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  2. Stingray injury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stingray_injury

    A stingray injury is caused by the venomous tail spines, ... and muscle cramps from the venom, and possible later infection from bacteria [3] or fungi. ...

  3. Stingray injuries are more common than you think. Here ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/stingray-injuries-more-common-think...

    Death from a stingray puncture is a rare occurrence and does not result from the venom but rather from the puncture wound itself. This would be if the barb injury was in the chest, abdomen, or neck.

  4. Woman details being impaled by 4-foot stingray in shallow ...

    www.aol.com/news/stingray-impales-womans-back...

    Death from a stingray barb is extremely rare, but it can happen if the puncture wound is in the chest, stomach or neck, the National Capital Poison Center notes. Upper back pierced with two barbs

  5. Death of Steve Irwin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Steve_Irwin

    While swimming in chest-deep water, 44-year-old Steve Irwin approached a stingray, with an approximate span of two metres (6 ft 7 in), from the rear, in order to film it swimming away. While the stingray has been described by most sources as a short-tail stingray, others have suggested that it may have been an Australian bull ray.

  6. Round stingray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Round_stingray

    A round stingray at La Jolla, CA. This species injures hundreds of people each year off California. A round stingray at Laguna Beach, CA. Every year, hundreds of beachgoers are accidentally stung by round stingrays along the coast of southern California. The sting is not fatal, though it is quite painful.

  7. Stingrays send thousands to the hospital each year. Here’s ...

    www.aol.com/stingrays-send-thousands-hospital...

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  8. What to do if you're stung by jellyfish, stingrays or other ...

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  9. Stingray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stingray

    A diversity of stingray fossils is known from the Eocene Monte Bolca formation from Italy, including the early stingaree Arechia, as well as Dasyomyliobatis, which is thought to represent a transitional form between stingrays and eagle rays, and the highly unusual Lessiniabatis, which had an extremely short and slender tail with no sting. [6] [7]