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太平雪
2005-04-07 19:01:00
主题:拜托 请帮忙 谢谢 并且 尽快 
内容:
我很想知道 如果我想查询有关潜水员事故的文章 该找哪个专门的网站 
有没有人可以告诉我 谢谢 我需要这方面的资料 
浅水游
2005-04-07 20:40:35
跟贴:for what???

有关台湾的资料
http://www.water-world.com.tw/tech/accd-ayalysis.htm
太平雪
2005-04-08 12:02:12
跟贴:我需要的是就是各方面潜水员事故的原因
我要写一些东西 
richard
2005-04-08 12:22:49
蓝色星球
richard61@sina.com
跟贴:Scuba Diving Accident

The day after a man lost his wife in a scuba diving accident, he was
greeted by two grim-faced policemen at his door.

"We're sorry to call on you at this hour, Mr. Wilkens, but we have
some information about your wife."

"Well, tell me!" the man said.

The policeman said, "We have some bad news, some good news and some
really great news. Which do you want to hear first?"

Fearing the worse, Mr. Wilkens said, "Give me the bad news first."

So the policeman said, "I'm sorry to tell you sir, but this morning we
found your wife's body in San Francisco Bay."

"Oh my god!," said Mr. Wilkens, overcome by emotion. Then, remembering
what the policeman had said, he asked, "What's the good news?"

"Well," said the policeman, "When we pulled her up she had two
five-pound lobsters and a dozen good size Dungeoness crabs on her."

"If that's the good news than what's the great news?!", Mr. Wilkens
demanded.

The policeman said, "We're going to pull her up again tomorrow
morning."
richard
2005-04-08 12:58:48
蓝色星球
richard61@sina.com
跟贴:以下是一些潜水事故的报道,不知是否有所帮助。

1) Scuba diver drowns off Australia's Gold Coast
GOLD COAST, Australia (3 Apr 2005) -- A man has died while scuba diving off the Gold Coast.
Witnesses who called police said the victim was diving with a female diver in the Gold Coast Seaway when he got into trouble.
Police and volunteer rescue boats rushed to the scene, pulled the divers out of the water and started to administer CPR.
Both divers were taken to hospital where the man, whose name has not yet been released, was pronounced dead.
The woman was reported in good condition.
CDNN will report additional details of the accident as they become available.


2) Dive buddy killed scuba diving husband says widow
SANTA ANA, California (24 Mar 2005) -- The widow of a Laguna Niguel man who died while scuba diving is suing his "diving buddy" for $4.5 million, alleging her husband's friend caused his death.
Brenda Palmer-Shatz filed a suit in Orange County Superior Court, saying Daryll Shatz's drowning on Nov. 30, 2003, was because of Steve Feldman's actions, "whether negligent or intentional," and done to cover up an unreported traffic accident by Feldman's daughter.
Feldman of Mission Viejo vehemently denied the allegations, saying he tried to help a panicked diver as best he could.
"Tragedies do happen without the other person being at fault," Feldman said Thursday. "I grieve for the loss of a very dear friend, a close and dear friend. I grieve for my friend's family and his wife, as well as for the impact of the tragedy on my own family and friends."
Daryll Shatz, 55, died while diving with Feldman 20 yards off Montage Beach, near Laguna Beach. Shatz had just completed 100 dives and was a member of the South Orange County Dive Club.
According to a preliminary investigation done at the time, Shatz's air hose became disconnected and his buoyancy compensator failed, said Capt. Danell Adams of the Laguna Beach Police Department. The Orange County coroner ruled the death an accidental drowning, she said.
"Nothing out of the ordinary was discovered," Adams said.
The wrongful death lawsuit alleges that Shatz didn't die because of equipment malfunction or because he panicked after a medical problem. Feldman failed in his role of dive buddy, a "special relationship" that required him to come to the aid of his diving partner, the suit says.
"Darryl Shatz was a meticulous, careful diver who's a computer programmer, analyst and scientist by profession, a person who took the most meticulous care of his equipment and his scuba dives just as he constructed his computer sites," said Lon B. Isaacson, Palmer-Shatz's attorney.
Palmer-Shatz believes Feldman removed some of Shatz's equipment so he would drown, the suit says. That would prevent Shatz from telling authorities about a hit-and-run that Feldman's daughter had been involved in, the lawsuit alleges.
The suit alleges that Feldman confided in Shatz before the dive that Feldman's daughter, who was on probation, had been involved in a hit-and-run accident. Feldman asked for Shatz's advice on how to handle it, the suit says, and Palmer-Shatz believes that her husband told Feldman to report his daughter to the police.
"Feldman wanted to keep Shatz from telling others, including the authorities, that Feldman's daughter had been guilty of committing an illegal hit-and-run accident," the suit says.
But Feldman said he told Shatz about the accident months before the dive and it was, in fact, just a "fender-bender."


3) Kelly's on the Bay & Aqua Nuts boat diver dies scuba diving
Kelly's on the Bay - Aqua Nuts dive boat
KEY LARGO, Florida (23 Mar 2005) -- A 52-year-old tourist has died while scuba diving with Kelly's on the Bay and Aqua Nuts.
Ted Young of York Pennsylvania was one of 28 divers aboard the Aqua Nuts, a day charter dive boat.
According to Young's dive buddy, the accident happened on the second and final dive of the day.
After surfacing at the end of the dive, the two divers started swimming back to the boat but separated and Young disappeared.
Just as Young's buddy arrived at the Aqua Nuts dive boat, divers on another boat spotted a diver in distress at the surface and alerted the Aqua Nuts crew.
One of the crew and four divers responded to the emergency pulling Young from the water and administering CPR as the dive boat rushed back to port where fire rescue personnel were waiting.
The Key Largo fire rescue team was unable to revive Young and he was pronounced dead .
It was the second scuba diving fatality in Florida this year. Lawrence Thurman, 60, died while wreck diving on the Duane.
In 2001, Ricardo Investments, which owns Aqua Nuts and Kelly's on the Bay, pled guilty to charges of gross negligence after leaving two divers at sea. The missing divers were rescued 26 hours later after swimming to a navigation light.


4) Death down under: Terrified Aussies panic after shark attack
Powered by CYBER DIVER News Network
Geoffrey Brazier
GERALDTON, Australia (20 Mar 2005) -- Witnesses traumatised by a shark attack on the skipper of their tourist boat off the Western Australian coast are making their way to shore.
Geoffrey Brazier, 26, from Perth was savaged by a six-metre shark while snorkelling with two other people at the Abrolhos Islands.
Mr Brazier was the skipper of the luxury cruise vessel Matrix, which was making its maiden voyage from Perth to Broome.
Senior Sergeant Shaun Miller says the Matrix is returning to Geraldton, where police will seek to speak further with witnesses.
"They're obviously very distressed at this particular time [but] we need to speak to them further," he said.
"There's people on the boat that we need to interview to get further information about the shark and the circumstances around Mr Brazier being taken by the shark."
Fear and Panic
Nature vs Aussie tourism spin doctors: They've got it all backwards down under...
The WA Fisheries Department, police and State Emergency Service officers are searching for the shark, which they intend to kill and use for forensic investigations.
Fisheries officer Rory McAuley says there are two reasons why they are hunting the shark.
"One of the reasons I believe is that they're looking for the remains of the victim, which will obviously be necessary for a coronial inquiry," Mr McAuley said.
"I guess the other main reason is to ensure that the shark poses no ongoing risk to public safety."
Sergeant Miller has urged rock lobster fishermen and their families on the islands to stay out of the water while authorities search for the shark.
"We have gone through the fisheries and people who are on the Abrolhos Islands [and] warned them in relation to a person being taken by a shark," he said.
"Obviously the message would be at this stage for all person to remain in vessels and on land and not venture into the water."
Greg Davis from the Geraldton Professional Fishermen's Association says those who live and work at the Abrolhos Islands are in shock, especially given a lot of them are surfers and scuba divers.
"It's always something that's in the back of your mind but some people have said that they won't go surfing at the Abrolhos again ... stuff like this," Mr Davis said.
"I've been going to the islands since I was born - 42 years - and it's the first time there's been a fatal shark attack as far as I'm aware in that time," he added.
However, Mr Davis says sharks are not an uncommon site in the area.
"You see a shark or two but it's par for the course because they live out there and the islands are ... not far from the edge of the shelf," he said.
"[It's] quite deep water and that's their habitat."


5) Spanish tsunami mission diver drowns diving in Indonesia
Powered by CYBER DIVER News Network
by LUTHER MONROE - CDNN Safety Editor
MADRID, Spain (16 Mar 2005) -- A diving accident has claimed the life of a Spanish naval diver in Indonesia to help tsunami victims.
Sgt. Justo Jesus Picallo, 36, drowned during a routine hull inspection and cleaning dive on the MS Galicia, which was anchored off Banda Aceh.
Picallo was one of 600 troops Spain sent to Indonesia in January on a humanitarian mission to help victims of the December 26 tsunami that killed more than 300,000 people.
The Spanish Defense Ministry is investigating the accident.


6)Scuba diver rescued after drifting for five hours off Monterey
MONTEREY, California (28 Mar 2005) -- An intense Monterey Bay rescue effort that appeared doomed as darkness fell ended with joy as two women came ashore on Sunday.
As storm clouds gathered and rain fell, frustrated rescuers had been searching into the evening for the two women, a kayaker and a diver, who went missing in separate incidents.
Then, just after 7 p.m., both women, who were described as skilled in their ocean sports, were found shivering within minutes of each other on different sides of the bay.
"Why they went out in weather like this is hard to guess," said Jim Gunter of the Pacific Grove Fire Department as winds picked up over the bay.
But that was a question best answered another day.
Sunday's dramatic rescue began in mid-afternoon, when a visitor from the East Bay city of Alamo spotted a waving diver in the water far off Lovers Point in Pacific Grove. Maria Schruggs called the Adventures by the Sea kayak shop on the beach below her, where the staff recommend she notify authorities. Schruggs called 911.
Meanwhile, another drama had begun to unfold. Heather Gastil, 28, rented a kayak from Adventures by the Sea's Cannery Row storefront and set out around 1:30 p.m. to explore the bay.
"We told her it was windy and she should stay close to the beach," said Adventures by the Sea employee Daniel Radacovich, who described Gastil as a marine biologist from San Diego.
Owner Frank Knight and manager Brian Glaseur set out in a 22-foot boat to search of the kayaker. When she wasn't immediately found nearby, they decided to check the Lovers Point area and help look for the stranded divers, Knight said.
"Two miles out, we pulled one diver out of the water and then another. We thought there were just two. But then they told us there were three more," Knight said. "That's when we said we'd better call the Coast Guard."
After a half-hour effort, Knight and Glaseur had pulled two more divers out. But the fifth, a 32-year-old San Jose woman, was still missing.
"Some of them were a half-mile apart," he said.
Then the Coast Guard's 47-foot rescue vessel showed up, and the divers boarded.
"It was a good Samaritan who pulled the four divers out of the water," said Coast Guard Seaman Adam Crouse at Lovers Point, where he scanned the horizon along with dozens of other rescue workers, including the Pacific Grove Fire Department's ocean rescue team, lifeguards, police and park rangers.
A Coast Guard helicopter was on its way from San Francisco, but at 140 knots an hour, Crouse said, the trip could take an hour. He added that the Coast Guard has only one vessel in Monterey large enough to handle the rough swells and winds that were building by late afternoon.
"It looks like it's going to be a long night," he said at 5 p.m. as the Fire Department pulled out its trucks and left the rescue efforts to the Coast Guard. "We know that the weather is going to get worse."
Knight said the divers told him they thought they had gone down at a 60-foot depth, but the waters were deeper and the sea so murky they decided to come back up. When they did, their dive boat and its pilot were nowhere to be seen, apparently drifted away in the high winds that were building. So they began waving and flashing the emergency strobe lights that were seen onshore.
Once he had off-loaded the diver to the Coast Guard vessel, Knight and Glaseur continued their search for Gastil, wondering why a bright orange kayak was suddenly so hard to find. They made three trips zigzagging the bay, from Monterey to Moss Landing and back, Glaseur said. Back at the Cannery Row storefront, employees Radacovich and Josh Eisen waited anxiously for word.
"We'll stay here all night until he comes back," Radacovich said.
The copter arrived, and the Coast Guard vessel pulled up to its Monterey pier to allow the four distraught divers to debark. One of them stood and stared out at the bay with tear-filled eyes.
By 6:30 it was dark and raining. The ship and helicopter were still circling the bay in widening arcs as dispatchers grew more doubtful of a positive outcome.
After dark, Knight and Glaseur headed back to their store. Unable to search in the dark, rough seas in the small craft, Knight could only wait for word from the Coast Guard.
At 7 p.m. police scanners crackled with the news: a shivering kayaker had come ashore at Sand City. A police spokesman said Gastil, who was wearing a life vest, had been tossed into the sea from her kayak and either swam or washed ashore. She walked to the Ultramar gas station in Sand City, where employees called police.
She appeared to be suffering from hypothermia but could speak and walk. She was taken by ambulance to Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula, where officials said she was in stable condition.
Knight was elated when he heard the news.
"But I feel for those divers. It's been one heck of an afternoon," he said.
Then, just 15 minutes later, Coast Guard radios came alive. Rescue efforts were called off and a woman was being brought into the pier, appearing to suffer from hypothermia. Although the Coast Guard would not release the woman's name or condition, police and Knight said she could walk and talk before she was taken by ambulance to Community Hospital.
Her fellow divers danced and hugged on the pier as she came ashore, Knight said.
"It's been quite a day," Coast Guard Seaman Meredith Hodgins said as the diver was headed to the hospital.
"We thought it looked really bad, but it turned into a pretty good day, a pretty good Easter Sunday. I guess in the end we had a little bit of resurrection here."
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