A great white shark swims by divers in a cage.

If you want to meet a great white shark that doesn't involve dressing up like a seal and covering yourself in blood, this may be the place for you. OCEARCH is giving away a chance to join a research expedition that will inevitably feature some of the ocean's apex predator. The last day to enter is September 30.

Scientists and the public can know where the sharks are traveling and when thanks to the research done by OCEARCH. White sharks are one of the shark species tagged by the organization.

It is possible to follow the lives of individual ocean animals with the help of the organization's open-access data. Whenever the animals surface, the tracker sends a ping of their location.

White sharks, also known as great white sharks, will be the focus of the upcoming contest. A great white shark can grow up to 20 feet long, reach speeds of 35 miles an hour, and have hundreds of serrated teeth.

For the most part, ocean animals and humans know better than to mess with orcas with their teeth.

A five-day, four-night trip along the southeast coast of the U.S. is what the grand prize winner and their guest can expect if they win the OCEARCH contest.