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Scuba history from a
diving bell
developed by
Guglielmo de Loreno
in 1535 up to John
Bennett's dive in
the Philippines to
amazing 308 meter in
2001 and much
more...
Humans have been
diving since man was
required to collect
food from the sea.
The need for air and
protection under
water was obvious.
Let us find out how
mankind conquered
the sea in the quest
to discover the
beauty of the under
water world.
1535 A diving
bell was developed
by Guglielmo de
Loreno.
1650 Guericke
developed the first
air pump.
1667 Robert Boyle
observes the
decompression
sickness or "the
bends". After
decompression of a
snake he noticed gas
bubbles in the eyes
of a snake.
1691 Another
diving bell weighted
barrels, connected
with an air pipe to
the surface, was
patented by Edmund
Halley.
1715 John
Lethbridge built an
underwater cylinder
that was supplied
via an air pipe from
the surface with
compressed air. To
prevent the water
from entering the
cylinder, greased
leather connections
were integrated at
the cylinder for the
operator’s arms.
1776 The first
submarine was used
for a military
attack.
1826 Charles
Anthony and John
Deane patented a
helmet for fire
fighters. This
helmet was used for
diving too. This
first version was
not fitted to the
diving suit. The
helmet was attached
to the body of the
diver with straps
and air was supplied
from the surface.
1837 Augustus
Siebe sealed the
diving helmet of the
Deane brothers' to a
watertight diving
suit and became the
standard for many
dive expeditions.
1843 The Royal
Navy established the
first diving school.
1865 An
underwater breathing
apparatus was
developed and
patented by Benoit
Rouquayrol and
Auguste Denayrouse.
A steel tank filled
with compressed air
was connected to a
valve and a
mouth-piece. The
tank was strapped to
the divers back and
the diver was
tethered to the
surface by a hose
that pumped fresh
air into the low
pressure tank. The
diver was able to
disconnect the
tether and to dive
with the tank on his
back for a few
minutes.
1877 The first
workable,
self-contained
diving rig that used
compressed oxygen
was developed by
Henry A. Fleuss.
1893 Louis Boutan
invented the first
underwater camera.
1908 Detailed
studies on the cause
and symptoms on
decompression
sickness were
published by John
Scott Haldane,
Arthur E. Boycott
and Guybon C.
Damant.
1911 Draeger of
Germany introduces
an oxygen
re-breather.
1912 The U.S.
Navy tested
decompression tables
published by John
Scott Haldane,
Arthur E. Boycott
and Guybon C.
Damant.
1917 The Mark V
Diving Helmet was
introduced by the
U.S. Bureau of
Construction &
Repair. The Mark V
Diving Helmet was
used for most
salvage work during
World War II and
became the standard
U.S. Navy Diving
equipment.
1923 W. H.
Longley became
famous for the first
underwater color
photos.
1924 The U.S.
Navy and Bureau of
Mines conduct first
helium-oxygen
experimental dives.
1925 A very
successful
self-contained
underwater breathing
unit is introduced
by Yves Le Prieur.
1930 A
bathysphere attached
to a barge by a
steel cable to the
mother ship has been
used for William
Beebe descended to
435 meter.
1930 Rubber
goggles with glass
lenses are developed
by Guy Gilpatric.
Soon face masks and
snorkels were in
common use.
1933 Yves Le
Prieur develops a
demand valve with a
high pressure air
tank. In this way
the diver became
independent from
hose connections to
the surface.
1933 Swim fins
are patented by
Louisde Corlieu in
France.
1934 Another
descent to 924 meter
in a bathysphere
was undertaken by
William Beebe and
Otis Barton.
1935 Louis de
Corlieu designed a
very popular fin for
divers.
1941 During World
War II, closed
circuit scuba
equipment is used by
Italian divers to
place explosives
under British naval
and merchant marine
ships.
1942 Jacques-Yves
Cousteau and Emile
Gagnan redesigned a
car regulator that
would automatically
provide compressed
air to a diver on
his slightest intake
of breath.
1943 The Aqua
Lung was born.
Jacques-Yves
Cousteau and Emile
Gagnan designed and
tested the first
Aqua-Lung. This
device is a
fundamental
improvement on air
supply for divers.
1947 A 94 meter
dive record in the
Mediterranean Sea
was made by Dumas
equipped with an
Aqua Lung regulator.
1948 In
California Otis
Barton descended to
a depth of 1372
meter in a modified
bathysphere.
1948 The first
Aqua Lung regulators
were imported to the
USA and the diving
community quickly
adopted this new,
convenient device.
1950 A completely
self-contained new
type of vessel
called the
bathyscaphe was
designed by August
Picard and his son
Jacques to go deeper
than any
bathysphere.
1951 The Reserve
Valve, later
commonly known as
"J" valve was
developed.
1951 Hans Hass
published "Diving as
Adventure"
1952 "Silent
World" was released
by Jacques-Yves
Cousteau, Frédéric
Dumas, and James
Dugan.
1953 "Underwater
Safety" containing
important basics on
diving safety, was
published by E. R.
Cross.
1954 The National
Cooperation in
Aquatics published
the "Science of Skin
and Scuba Diving"
and it becomes the
main textbook for
diver education.
1954 The
television program
Kingdom of the Sea
starring Zale Parry
is aired in the US.
That same year Parry
broke the depth
record by diving to
64 meter near
Catalina, CA. Her
record attracted
many female to scuba
diving.
1955 The first
formal instructor
certification
program was created
by Al Tillman and
Bev Morgan.
1956 At the
University of
California the first
wetsuit is
introduced by
scientists and the
red and white
"Divers Down" flag
was introduced by
Ted Nixon.
1958 Sherwood
Manufacturing
announces the piston
regulator.
1959 YMCA
organized the first
nationally scuba
diver certification
program and the
Underwater Society
of America was
formed.
1960 Jacques
Picard and Don Walsh
descended to 10921
meter in the
bathyscaphe
"Trieste".
1960 Al Tillman
and Neal Hess create
the National
Association of
Underwater
Instructors (NAUI).
1961 The National
Association of Skin
Diving Schools
(NASDS) was founded
by John Gaffney.
1962 A number of
experiments were
conducted whereby
people lived in
underwater habitats.
1963 In the "Man
in the Sea" project
Ed Link spends 24
hours at 61 meter.
1966 The
Professional
Association of
Diving Instructors
(PADI) was founded
by John Cronin and
Ralph Ericson.
1968 A dive to
133 meter, using
compressed air, was
carried out by John
J. Gruener and R.
Neal Watson.
1970 Bob Clark
founded Scuba
Schools
International (SSI).
1971 Scubapro
introduces the
Stabilization
Jacket.
1980 Divers Alert
Network (DAN) was
founded at Duke
University to
promote safe diving.
1981 A dive
record to 686 meter
was made at the Duke
Medical Center
decompression
chamber.
1983 The first
commercially
available dive
computer, the Orca
Edge, was
introduced.
1985 The wreck of
the Titanic was
found.
1990 Further
improvements and
developments are
taking place and
find its way into
the scuba diving
sport. The use of
mixed gases, like
Oxygen and Helium,
full face masks,
underwater voice
communication,
propulsion systems,
computer, etc.
became more common
in the 1990s.
1994 Bret Gilliam
and Mitch Skaggs
formed Technical
Diving International
(TDI)
1998 Scuba Diving
International (SDI)
was created.
1999 Chuck Driver
and John Bennett
descend to 200
meter. The deepest
oceanic dive ever
completed. The same
year Barte Vestor
set a challenging
225 meter mark.
2001 John Bennett
breaks his own world
record with a dive
to an amazing 308
meter.
2005,
Friday 10 June,
Egypt - Red Sea -
06:11,Nuno
Gomes - World's
Deepest
Scuba
Diving Record -
318.25m !!
2005, July 9,
Corsica, technical
diver Pascal Bernabe
reached a depth of
330 meters, setting
a new world record. |