Free-divingFree-diving is an aquatic sport, considered an extreme sport, in which divers attempt to reach great depths unassisted by breathing apparatus. The world record for the "No Limits" category of competitive free diving is held by French diver Loic Leferme. On 20 October 2002 he dove to a depth of 162 m (531.4 feet), surpassing the previous record by 2 meters. The current woman's record is held by Tanya Streeter, who dove to 160 m (524.8 feet) on 17 August 2002. The unofficial records are held by the late Audrey Mestre (166 m), and her husband Francisco “Pipin” Ferreras (170 m). On 30 October 2004, Loic Leferme reached a depth of 171 m in the No Limits category; this new world record has yet to be ratified by AIDA, an international governing body of free-diving. Competitive free diving is generally broken down into three categories; static, dynamic and depth.
The depth category has four sub-sections:
Women and men's records are recognized in each category. Free-diving featured heavily in the 1988 Luc Besson film Le Grand bleu (The Big Blue).
Physiology of Free-divingThe human body has several adaptations under diving conditions, which stem from mammalian diving reflex. These adaptations enable the human body to endure depth and lack of oxygen far beyond what one would expect. The romantic explanation is given by the anthropologists' aquatic ape theory These are the adaptations human body have under water and high pressure.
Some famous free divers
See alsoExternal links
Categories: Diving | Extreme sports | Individual sports |
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