David Blaine's current record for the longest breath hold is 17 minutes and 4.4 seconds.
David Blaine's current record for holding his breath underwater is 17 minutes and 4.4 seconds.
The current world record for the longest time spent in an anechoic chamber is 45 minutes and 10 seconds.
The current world record for holding breath underwater is 24 minutes and 3.45 seconds, held by Aleix Segura Vendrell. David Blaine is not the current record holder.
David Blaine's current underwater record is 17 minutes and 4.4 seconds. He achieved this by holding his breath and staying submerged in a water tank.
The longest anechoic chamber record ever achieved is 45 minutes and 47 seconds, set by Microsoft in 2015.
a dolphin or whale
In 2007 Lithuanian Arvydas Gaiciunas claimed a new world record for holding his breath underwater: 15 minutes, 58 seconds.
David Blaine's current record for holding his breath underwater is 17 minutes and 4.4 seconds.
The current world record for the longest time spent in an anechoic chamber is 45 minutes and 10 seconds.
the longest time spent under water by a human is 17:04.4. by David Blaine. This is the offcial Guiness world record.
The current world record for breath-holding is held by Stig Severinsen from Denmark, who held his breath underwater for 22 minutes.
four years is the current record, according to the last post.
The record for the longest time wearing a hat is 1 year, 283 days, achieved by Odilon Ozare from Brazil in 2016.
The current world record for holding breath underwater is 24 minutes and 3.45 seconds, held by Aleix Segura Vendrell. David Blaine is not the current record holder.
Overall, studies have been done with many animals and the current record-holder is the loggerhead musk turtle, which has been found to be capable of holding it's breath for more than 5,000 hours during forced immersion. That's 208 days, folks. They can absorb oxygen from the water through their skin.
No - the record was taken by Torpoint in June 2013, but does not yet appear on the GWR website.
I don't know how long YOU can hold your breath under water but at 2008, a man named David Blaine broke the world record for holding his breath for seventeen minutes and four seconds underwater.