To read news specific to Big Blue Tech - Click Here




Posts Tagged ‘wreck diver’






WRECK DIVING

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

wreck_diving_001-300x213 WRECK DIVING

Hidden dangers:

A shipwreck is often the only thing standing up from a flat seabed plain. Consequently, it becomes a magnet for all kinds of fish, shellfish and other marine life. Big conger eels live in most shipwrecks. Lobsters call them home. So do big crabs. And huge shoals of pouting and pollack are always to be found circling around.However, there are serious dangers that must be watched. There is little danger from sealife as big congers will not attack you, nor will big lobster or crab unless you put your hand in their claws.

The real dangers are the depth and the time spent underwater which must never be forgotten. Decompression sickness - the “bends” - is always waiting to strike divers who break the rules and make fast ascents from deep wrecks. The British Sub-Aqua Club has always recommended 50 metres as the sensible limit for experienced amateurs diving using compressed air. Wreck divers should stick to that limit, even though modern gas mixtures appear more tolerant than compressed air. They should be wary too of their depth when exploring the ship. The inside may be much deeper than the outside if the ship has sunk into a soft seabed.

Wreck diving is not for the inexperienced and has it’s own special dangers. Like all amateur diving, it is never carried out alone. There is the risk of running low on air due to becoming absorbed in exploring the wreck, or getting entangled in a fishing net (sometimes many nets are draped over one ship). The wreck diver is bound to consider exploring inside the wreck if a suitable hole or entrance is found. However wreck penetration is the most dangerous part of this kind of diving.

Even swimming under a piece of wreckage is dangerous. Hanging wreckage may be so unstable that it will fall because of the disturbance which is caused by the diver’s exhaust bubbles or fin movements. One diver on a wreck recently was trapped by a steel door falling on him and pinning him to the seabed. He was saved by the prompt action of his buddy diver.

3023858-200x300 WRECK DIVING

Forbidden wrecks:

A number of divers have died trapped in wrecks. Silting of a wreck takes place very quickly after her sinking. This makes it very dangerous to enter a wreck without some foolproof method of return to a clear exit point. One such method is a lifeline. A few fin strokes inside a wreck are enough to turn visibility into absolute zero. In that black cloud, even the powerful torches which every wreck diver carries, could not show them a way out to the open sea. Wreck penetration is not a spur of the moment thing. It has to be carefully planned in the same way as cave diving.

There are certain wrecks that are protected by law. These are wrecks of historic importance and “War Graves”. Forty-eight wrecks dating from a Bronze Age galley to a submarine of 1880 are designated under the Protection of Wrecks Act of 1973 and all diving on them is banned without special permission. A classic example of this kind of wreck is Henry VIII’s flagship Mary Rose, sunk in 1545. After being found by amateur divers, she was protected until raised and put on show at Portsmouth. It is also possible to see some protected wrecks through the Nautical Archaeology Society.

The Military Remains Act of 1986 puts other restrictions on some wrecks of ships and aircraft “known to contain remains of service personnel”. Though divers may visit these “war graves”, it is only on a look-but-no-touch basis. Divers may not enter such wrecks, disturb them or remove any artifacts.

Wreck divers like to collect souvenirs from wrecks but every item recovered from a wreck must be reported to the Receiver of Wreck at the Coastguard Agency in Southampton. In the case of a small fairly modern item, such as a porthole, the diver is usually allowed to keep it. Other more valuable items are held by the Receiver for a year and a day and, if not claimed by their owner during that time, become the property of the Crown. They then may be auctioned. In such a case the diver is entitled to a salvage award from the proceeds.


Technical Diving Library and Resources

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

TDI Resources (Technical Diving International)

Liability and Release Form

Medical Form

Physician Form

Semi Closed Rebreather Diver

Solo Diver

Air Dilluent CCR Diver

Mixed Gas CCR Diver

Advanced Mixed Gas CCR Diver

Cavern Diver

Intro to Cave Diver

Full Cave Diver

Gas Blender

Advanced Gas Blender

Oxygen Service Technician

Nitrox Diver

Advanced Wreck Diver

Nitrox Diver

Intro to Tech

Advanced Nitrox Diver

Decompression Procedures

Extended Range

Trimix Diver

Advanced Trimix Diver

CMAS Resources (Confédération Mondiale des Activités Subaquatiques)

3 Srar Diver

2 Star Diver

1 Star Diver

Rescue Diver

Children and Youth Diving

Mixed Gas Diver

Normoxic Trimix Diver

Overhead Scooter Diver

Closed Circuit Rebreather Diver

Semi Closed Rebreather Diver

Standards and Procedures

Unerwater Navigation

Trimix Diver

Training and Diving

Underwater Scooter

Cave Diver

Gas Blender and Service Technician

Extended Range Diver

Scientific Diver

PADI Resources (Professional Association of Diving Instructors)

Gas Blender Release

Blender Fill Log

RSTC Medical

Liability Form

Release Form

Release for Nitrox Diving

BSAC Resources (British Sub Aqua Club)

Combined Nitrox Diver

Gas Blender

Advanced Nitrox Diver

Sport Mixed Gas Diver

Extended Range Diver

Advanced Mixed Gas

IANTD Resources (International Association of Nitrox and Technical Divers)

Normoxic Trimix

Technical Diver

Trimix CCR

Gas Blender

Air CCR

Liability Form

Advanced Nitrox

Technical Cave

Nitrox Diver

Release Form

Military Diving Resources

U.S Navy Diving Manual

Contaminated Water Diving Manual

User Operation Manuals

ISC APECS Operation Manual

VR3 Quick Reference Manual

US DIVERS Service and Cleaning Manual

AP Inspiration “Vision” Closed Circuit Rebreather Operation Manual

Sentinel Closed Circuit Rebreather Operation Manual

Sofnolime Reference Guide

Azimuth Closed circuit Rebreather Operation Manual

AP Inspiration “Classic” Closed Circuit Rebreather Operation Manual

Drager “Dolphin” Semi Closed Rebreather Manual

Azimuth Closed Circuit Rebreather Brochure

Drager “Ray” Semi Closed Rebreather Manual

Ap Evolution Operation Manual

Ap Inspiration Operation Manual

Nexus Quick Reference Manual

Suunto D6 Owner Manual

Nexus Closed Circuit Rebreather Operation Manual

Reference Material

Reduced Gradient Bubble Model

Deep Diver Workbook

Physics, Physiology, And Medicine Of Diving

Occupational Diving Cometance

Understanding M-Values

Learners guide to CCR

Texas University Diving Saftey

Confessions of a Mortal Diver

Oxygen Toxicity Calculations

Understanding Deep Stops

Understanding Setpoints For CCR

Cave Divers Are Mortal

Rebreather Blunders And Malfunctions

Boom Scenario

Basic Equipment For Cave Diving

Diving Terms and Explanations

Dive Profile Safety

Diving The Hms Repulse

Diving Incident Report Form

So You Want to Technical Dive

Predive Checklist

In Water Recompression

Depth and Gas

Book Reviews

Rebreather Fundamentals

Dive Medic Resource Manual


South African shipwreck diver waits more than a decade for treasure

Monday, September 28th, 2009

http://i.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/01490/shipwreck_1490443c.jpg

Red tape has kept Charlie Shapiro, treasure hunter, away from the 224-year-old wreck of the Brederode, which is laden with crated-up porcelain, tin and gold from Indonesia and China.

Centuries-old trinkets from rusty buttons to gifts destined for kings take up a room in Charlie Shapiro’s house - treasures from a lifetime spent combing the ocean floor for shipwrecks.

But the wreck diver’s trove is incomplete, as one of his richest recent finds lies waiting in the deep fathoms of the ocean a decade after its discovery, at risk from pillagers.

Shapiro found the 224-year-old shipwreck of the Dutch Brederode 11 years ago, but a series of mishaps has left him still waiting for government to grant him a permit to excavate its 120 million-rand (£10.1 million) cargo.

“That wreck was my baby, that was my life’s work,” Shapiro says of the ship which has dominated three decades of his existence.

From combing archives in Europe and South Africa, to a 16-year search and against-the-odds discovery of a ship considered an amazingly well-preserved archaeological find, Shapiro’s tale is literally of a treasure hunt.

Greed and disagreements broke up the group of salvors that he formed, and his permit to excavate the ship was lost in a whirl of law changes and a government moratorium on all permits, which has only recently been lifted.

Jonathan Sharfman, a maritime archeologist at the South African Heritage Resources Agency, told AFP that the Brederode, sunk in 1785, is a “completely unique kind of shipwreck. It has the potential to be really high profile”.

This means that Shapiro is unlikely to get his permit without in-depth excavation and conservation plans for the ship, which is still laden with perfectly crated porcelain, tin and gold carried from Indonesia and China.

“We just want to ensure everybody is doing what they should do. We can’t just allow it to be ripped out and sold,” said Sharfman.

“It’s a reasonably intact ship… it really is an amazing example. It presents a unique set of archaeological information.”

The ship, which belonged to the Dutch East India Company, is one of an estimated 3,000 shipwrecks sunk by the forces around South Africa’s unforgiving coastline, which have spawned legends of phantom ships around the treacherous Cape.

From the Shipwreck Coast on the west of the country all the way up to Namibia’s Skeleton Coast, these waters have struck fear into the hearts of sailors and many have perished.

Through the damp mist, the famous sea phantom the Flying Dutchman has been seen from time to time, steered by a Captain van der Decken, cursed to sail the seas for eternity after he insisted on rounding the Cape in foul weather.

Some beached ships have become popular tourist attractions in places like the tiny Northern Cape mining town of Koingnaas, but those that sank are difficult to reach, making the South African coastline an underwater museum.

Shapiro and his company have excavated ships such as the British Birkenhead, which sunk in 1852 and which became famous for starting the tradition of allowing women and children to save themselves first.

A section of his home holds perfectly preserved porcelain plates, weapons and valuable statuettes destined for kings of Portugal, France and England as a gift from the king of Siam aboard the Portuguese ship Milagros in 1686.

From a hoard of bloated wine bottles, an old vintage soured by sea water, to scary-looking medical tools encrusted with rust, Shapiro feels the rich historical legacy of shipwrecks is better kept where people can see it.

The permit tussle is a result of the Unesco convention on underwater heritage, which prevents commercial exploitation of ships over 60 years old, and which South Africa’s parliament has still not ratified.

“They want wrecks left in situ for future generations - what’s wrong with our generation? Wrecks are not there forever,” says Shapiro.

Now, he can only wait as his treasure lies on the ocean floor off the coast of Struisbaai, 220 kilometres (135 miles) from Cape Town, where he has already spotted people searching for the wreck site.


 


Top of Page

Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional Valid CSS!