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Underwater diving is the practice of going underwater, either with breathing apparatus (scuba diving and surface supplied diving) or by breath-holding (free-diving).
Recreational diving is a popular activity (also called sports diving or subaquatics). Professional diving (commercial diving or diving for financial gain) takes a range of diving activities to the underwater work site.
Levels of training and types of equipment and breathing gases used differ between types of diving.
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Underwater diving for commercial, rather than recreational purposes may have begun in Ancient Greece, since both Plato and Homer mention the sponge as being used for bathing. The island of Kalymnos was a main centre of diving for sponges. By using weights of as much as 15 kilograms (33 lb) to speed the descent, breath-holding divers would descend to depths up to 30 metres (98 ft) for as much as 5 minutes to collect sponges.[1]
Free diving includes a range of activities from simple breath-hold diving to competitive apnoea dives.
The ability to dive and swim underwater can be a useful emergency skill, and is an important part of watersport and navy safety training. More generally, entering water from a height is an enjoyable leisure activity, as is underwater swimming with or without breathing apparatus.
The addition of a short breathing tube (snorkel) allows the diver to breathe while remaining immersed, but close to the surface.
Scuba divers are sometimes known as frogmen, particularly divers engaged on armed forces covert operations.
Breathing systems consist of one or more diving cylinders containing breathing gas at high pressure connected to a diving regulator.
Closed-circuit breathing systems allow recycling of exhaled gases. This reduces the volume of gas used, making a rebreather lighter and more compact than an open-circuit breathing set. Rebreathers also make far fewer bubbles and less noise than open-circuit scuba; this makes them attractive to military, scientific and media divers.
The alternative to scuba is breathing gases supplied via an umbilical from the surface, often from a diving support vessel but sometimes, indirectly via a diving bell. Surface-supplied divers almost always wear diving helmets or full face diving masks. An alternative to SCUBA diving, called "SNUBA" or "hooka" diving, has the diver supplied via an umbilical from a small cylinder or compressor on the surface. It is popular for light work such as hull cleaning, and also as a tourist activity for those who are not SCUBA-certified.
Saturation diving lets professional divers live and work at depth for days or weeks at a time. This type of diving allows greater economy of work and enhanced safety. After working in the water, divers rest and live in a dry pressurized habitat on or connected to a diving support vessel, oil platform or other floating work station, at the same pressure as the work depth. They may be transferred in a diving bell. Decompression at the end of the dive may take many days.
Underwater diving training should come from a qualified diving instructor, to be safe. This is available from many diving training bodies.
Basic Dive Training entails the learning of skills required for the safe conduct of activities in an underwater environment, such as the buddy system, dive planning, and use of dive tables.
Basic underwater skills that a beginner should learn include:
Submarines, submersibles and 'hard' diving suits enable undersea diving to be carried out within a dry environment at normal atmospheric pressure, albeit more remotely. Underwater robots and remotely operated vehicles and also carry out some functions of divers at greater depths and in more dangerous environments. See also
Humans are not the only air-breathing creatures to dive. Marine mammals such as seals, dolphins and whales, dive to feed and catch prey under the sea as do penguins and many seabirds, as well as various reptiles: turtles, saltwater crocodiles, seasnakes and Marine Iguanas. Many mammals, birds and reptiles also dive in freshwater rivers and lakes.
A list of the diving abilities of air-breathing diving animals is available in The Penguiness Book. All diving records given in the Penguiness database come from peer-reviewed, scientific literature and can be considered as the most accurate records.
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