179. Examining early technical
diving deaths: the aquaCORPS incident reports (1992-1996)
Quello riportato qui di
seguito - tratto dalle famose riviste americane "acquaCORPS"
e "technicalDIVER" - è un interessante documento
contenente i reports dei numerosi incidenti subacquei
avvenuti tra il 1992 e il 1996 agli albori della
cosiddetta “subacquea tecnica”.
I
rapporti analizzano le cause e la dinamica di 44
incidenti (39 dei quali fatali) così suddivisi:
-
15 incidenti riguardano
immersioni profonde in aria, che venivano fatte
abitualmente negli anni ’90;
-
10 incidenti riguardano
la respirazione di un gas sbagliato in profondità,
perchè a quell'epoca non esisteva un protocollo per
la marcatura delle bombole e per fare il “gas
switch”;
-
5 incidenti riguardano
la fine del gas;
-
3 incidenti riguardano
la mancanza dell'addestramento necessario;
-
3 incidenti riguardano
il salto della decompressione.
Dalla lettura dei report
di questi incidenti si possono ancora oggi trarre
UTILI INSEGNAMENTI per effettuare le immersioni
tecniche in maggiore SICUREZZA.
|
|
Michael Menduno
is
InDepth’s
editor-in-chief and an award-winning reporter and
technologist who has written about diving and diving
technology for 30 years. He coined the term “technical
diving.” His magazine
aquaCORPS: The Journal for Technical Diving
(1990-1996), helped usher tech diving into mainstream
sports diving. He also produced the first Tek, EUROTek,
and ASIATek conferences, and organized Rebreather Forums
1.0 and 2.0. Michael received the OZTEKMedia Excellence
Award in 2011, the EUROTek Lifetime Achievement Award in
2012, and the TEKDive USA Media Award in 2018. In
addition to his responsibilities at
InDepth,
Menduno is a contributing editor for DAN Europe’s
Alert
Diver
magazine,
and
X-Ray Magazine.
|
"InDepth"
March 4, 2020
by Michael
Menduno
Unlike the
military and commercial diving communities, which made
the transition to mixed gas technology with the benefit
of deep pockets, extensive infrastructure, and tightly
controlled diving operations, the sports diving
community’s adoption of mixed and rebreather technology
was largely a do-it-yourself venture.
We began reporting on these
accidents in my magazine aquaCORPS Journal and
its sister publication technicalDIVER in 1992
and continued until our final issue in January 1996. We
tried to include all of the tech diving accidents that
occurred in between issues, though there were
undoubtedly incidents that were not reported. We
formalized these in a column titled, “Incident Reports,”
which first appeared in aquaCORPS #6 COMPUTING
(1993) and quickly became the best-read section of the
magazine.
The reports were based on the
accident analysis approach pioneered by famed explorer
Sheck Exley in his book,
Basic Cave Diving: A Blueprint
for Survival,
which is available as a free download from the National
Speleological Society Cave Diving Section. I did much of
the reporting, but we also received reports from Dr. RW
Bill Hamilton, Dr. Bill Stone, Rob Palmer, Jim Bowden,
Dr. Ann Kristovich, Denny Willis, and others.
Our goal, which was arguably in
line with what human factor’s experts like Gareth Lock
call
“Just Culture,”
was to present an objective, non-judgmental report of
what went wrong, leaving out the names of the divers
involved, so that we could all learn from others’
mistakes and experience. However, divers in three high
profile accidents were named in reports published by
aquaCORPS. They were Chris and Chrissie Rouse
(1992), the subject of Bernie Chowdhury’s book, The
Last Dive (2000); British cave diver Ian Roland
(1994), who was part of Dr. Bill Stone’s Sistema Huautla
expedition; and Sheck Exley (1994), whose accident
report was reprinted in aquaCORPS with
permission from the Undersea Hyperbaric Medical
Society’s newsletter, Pressure.
Arguably, though extremely
valuable, this type of reporting is largely absent today
and would likely be very difficult to conduct in today’s
litigious environment. [See
“The Case for an Independent
Investigation & Testing Laboratory,”
by John Clarke in InDepth 1.11]. In total, we reported
on 42 incidents, 11 of which were non-fatal and six
involving two or more deaths, for a total of 38
fatalities.
Though accidents typically involve
numerous factors, some broad observations can be drawn
from the reports.
-
15/44 incidents (34%) involved “deep air” diving,
which was still a thing for much of the 1990s
-
10/44 (23%) involved breathing the wrong mix at
depth. At the time, protocols for cylinder labeling
and gas switching were not standardized
-
5/44 (11%) involved “out of gas” incidents
-
3/44 (7%) involved lack of training
-
3/44 (7%) involved omitted decompression
The community was painfully aware
of these incidents, and various efforts, including
promoting “best practices”—for example through
aquaCORPS’s “Blueprint for Survival 2.0” (an update
of Exley’s recommendations for mixed gas diving),
improved training, and the creation of operational
diving standards such as Woodville Karst Plains
Project’s (WKPP) and later Global Underwater Explorers (GUE)
DIR standards—were advanced to improve diving safety. By
the mid- to late-1990s, it seemed as if tech diving
safety had improved.
Not surprising, in all but two of
the incidents presented, divers were using open-circuit
scuba. There were only a small number of rebreathers
available in the technical diving community during the
early and mid-1990s. Rebreather use started growing in
earnest in the late 1990s with the introduction of AP
Diving’s “Inspiration,” the first production line sport
rebreather in 1997, and the original KISS rebreather in
1998, which were soon followed by others.
Along with the growth of units,
rebreather fatalities also grew, creating a second wave
of tech diving fatalities beginning in the 2000s. In
2012, hyperbaric physician and rebreather diver Andrew
Fock presented the findings of his research on
rebreather fatalities, titled “Killing Them Softly,” at
the
Rebreather Forum 3.0
held in Orlando, Florida. Fock concluded that the risk
of dying on a rebreather was 10 times that of
open-circuit scuba.
His paper,
“Analysis of Recreational
Closed-Circuit Rebreather Deaths 1998-2010,”
was published in 2013 in
Diving
and Hyperbaric Medicine.
From 1998-2018, there were approximately 313 fatalities,
or an average of about 16 deaths per year. This average
has improved slightly (14.8 per year) from 2013-2018,
while rebreather use is seen to have grown. The belief
today among the community is that rebreather safety has
improved—Michael
Menduno |
The
aquaCORPS
Incident Reports (1992-1996)
Here are the
early technical diving incidents as reported in
aquaCORPS and technicalDIVER.
technicalDIVER
3.2 (1992)
June 1992
“U-Who” Boat, New Jersey—An
East Coast wreck diver blew up to the surface as a
result of operational problems while diving trimix on
the newly discovered, unidentified New Jersey U-boat,
the “U-Who” at 66 m/215 ft. The diver omitted about 30
minutes of decompression and suffered decompression
illness during his evacuation. According to onsite
observers, the diver, who had completed a trimix course,
was “grossly overweighted and was diving new equipment
including stage bottles that he was not well practiced
with.” On descent, the diver missed the anchor line, got
separated from his partner, and sank straight to the
bottom at about 66 m/215 ft, missing the wreck. Rather
than trying to surface immediately or send up a lift bag
indicating “diver in distress,” the diver searched for
the wreck on the bottom under low visibility conditions,
and he burned through approximately 200 cubic feet (cf)
of gas/5,660 liters (l) in less than 10 minutes. Out of
bottom mix, lost, overweighted with no ascent line, and
unable to gain sufficient buoyancy with his drysuit or
back mounted wings, the diver elected to ditch his
weight belt and blew to the surface switching to his EAN
50 decompression gas fsw on the way up.
The diver showed no symptoms of
decompression sickness upon surfacing and was
immediately put on surface oxygen. He was evacuated by a
Coast Guard chopper which did not have any oxygen
onboard. Unfortunately, he wasn’t packed with an O2
cylinder and manifested symptoms in flight. Upon
landing, he was successfully treated with a single Table
6. Clearly, this incident was a “blow up” and cannot be
counted as a traditional DCI case. To date, there
appears to have been only one known incident of
decompression illness involving trimix in approximately
500-600 recent U.S. “technical” dives.
July 1992
Alachua Sink, Florida—
A newly trained cave diver got lost in the cavern zone
after being separated from the team’s line in zero
visibility conditions at Alachua Sink and drowned. His
partner survived. Instead of following the permanent
line which begins at a log in the basin, the team ran a
reel during the evening dive in order to make their way
down through the sloping cavern zone to the main tunnel.
The basin had near zero visibility conditions due to the
seasonal algae bloom which usually clears up at about 40
m/130 ft at the upstream/downstream tunnel junction.
About 18-23 m/60-80 ft into the dive, the team realized
they had missed the main tunnel. After searching for the
tunnel for several minutes in 1 m/3-4 ft visibility,
they decided to tum the dive and lost visual and
physical contact with each other. The surviving partner
reeled in believing his partner was ahead of him on the
line. Reaching the surface alone and realizing his
partner was still in the water, he attempted numerous
line searches in order to locate the diver without
success, and went for help. Though the lost diver had
several hours of gas in his double 95’s he was unable to
find his way up and out of the funnel-shaped cavern
zone. A contributing factor may have been that he was
only carrying a 50-foot “jump reel” rather than the
150-foot safety reel recommended by the cave diving
training agencies. Ironically, if the dive had
been conducted during the day, observers
speculate that it should have been easy to find
a way out.
Alachua Sink is considered an
advanced dive by experienced cave divers
due to low visibility conditions, depth, and
the arduous climb out of the water. Most divers
wait for the winter season to make the dive
because of the low visibility in the basin
during the spring and summer. Due to the poor
conditions, it took three–and-a-half days for
teams to recover the body, which was found
wedged in the ceiling of the cavern.
Andrea Doria,
New York—An
experienced diver wearing double over-pressurized 72’s
“ran out of gas” while making his eleventh penetration
dive on the Andrea Doria (73 m/240 ft). His
partner, who entered the water with a “half-filled” set
of steel 120s—insufficient gas to safely make the
dive—survived. Both were breathing trimix though neither
was formally trained in its use. The team was separated
during a penetration in the wreck. When the surviving
partner exited at 67 m/220 ft with only several hundred
psi remaining in his doubles and found his age bottles
clipped off near the anchor line, his partner was
nowhere to be found. The body was later recovered. His
tanks were empty. A close friend who had trained with
the diver reported that the diver had had problems
managing his gas on several prior occasions. What’s more
was that the diver was using trimix as a suit inflation
gas in the chill 45 degrees Fahrenheit/7 degrees
Celsius water which was possibly a contributing factor
in the accident, one that could have impaired the
diver’s judgment.
Andrea Doria,
New York—Two weeks
later another trained, experienced diver drowned after
getting separated from the mainline during a wreck
penetration on the Doria while the team worked
as planned at two different places within the wreck.
Though the trimix used to conduct the operation was a
big safety factor, analysts on site believe the diver
left the line to explore just a little further for
artifacts before making his planned exit—contrary to the
dive plan. He wasn’t running a gap reel. In addition,
his primary light apparently failed, leaving only a
single dim secondary light to exit the silted wreck.
This probably added to his confusion. Lost in the wreck,
he ran out of gas and drowned before the team was able
to locate him. His body was later recovered at 65 m/230
ft. Though he was a cave-trained police diver who
regularly dived solo and had been trained in mix, he did
not have extensive wreck penetration experience and had
gotten slightly disoriented on their previous dive.
Sadly, the diver apparently told his partner prior to
the dive that he just had to bring home a Doria
artifact for his pregnant wife.
Arundo,
New Jersey—A very
experienced deep wreck diver knowingly dived beyond the
NOAA oxygen limits while conducting an enriched air dive
on the Arundo (42 m/135 ft), when he suffered
an oxygen seizure and drowned. The diver was breathing
an EAN 40 (40% O2, balance nitrogen). This
mix had a rated Maximum Operating Depth or MOD of 87
f/27m (at a partial pressure of oxygen or PO2
of 1.45). However, the deck of the wreck is at 34m/110
ft with a maximum depth of 42m/132 ft, resulting in a PO2
of 1.7-2.0 atm which is well above the CNS
toxicity threshold.
The diver had told others in the past
that he didn’t follow the NOAA guidelines as he believed
they were too conservative. An individual who knew the
diver well believed he was probably diving the USN’s
exceptional exposure limits for oxygen which are
generally not considered conservative enough.
In one case, the diver recommended
that another follow his example (After all, diving
air at 250 fsw is a PO2 of 1.8 atm. No
problem!). The problem is that CNS toxicity is a
function of both PO2 time and other factors,
many of which are not well understood. His body was
found approximately 45-50 minutes into the dive with
regulator out of his mouth and 1500 psi on his doubles.
Maximum depth on his computer was 41 m/132 ft.
Chester Polling,
Massachusetts—An
experienced 45-year-old wreck diver suddenly lost
consciousness during a 52 m/170 ft air dive on the
Chester Polling and drowned in the arms of his
partner. The exact cause of his death is unknown. The
team descended on the “near virgin” wreck at 43-52
m/140-170 ft for what had been planned to be a short
first dive of the day, leaving their inflatable boat
unattended but anchored into the wreck. Conditions were
good, and there was no current. About 10-15 minutes into
the dive, the surviving partner called the dive and
began to ascend to the bow at 43 m/140 ft to free their
anchor.
The diver drifted back down to the
bottom briefly for one more sweep of the area. When he
returned to their ascent line, he didn’t look right to
his partner who signaled, “OK?” The diver signaled, “NO—not
OK,” but didn’t indicate what was wrong. His partner
grabbed him by the harness to maintain contact during
their ascent. As they ascended, the diver began moving
his arms and legs and then his legs went limp at about
27 m/90 ft. At 24 m/80 ft, his regulator fell out of his
mouth and the diver lost consciousness.
The surviving partner was freaked and
tried to resuscitate the diver without success. At 5
m/15 ft, the surviving partner elected to complete a
portion of his decompression before surfacing, removed
the diver’s weight belt, inflated his BC, and pushed him
to the surface. There was no surface support person
or anyone on their boat. The surviving partner
completed about five minutes of air decompression,
surfaced, and went on oxygen. A nearby sailboat had
picked up the drowned diver and had radioed the Coast
Guard station which was only a few minutes away.
CPR was applied to no avail. There were no life signs.
The diver was evacuated to the hospital and pronounced
dead. The autopsy stated the cause of death was
drowning. It is highly unlikely that the event was an
oxygen convulsion (a P02 of 1.26 atm at low
to moderate work levels). The diver had no previous
history of cardiac problems and was reportedly in great
shape.
Ginnie Springs, Florida—A
trained cave diver lost consciousness and drowned while
making an enriched air stage dive at Devil’s Eye at
Ginnie Springs. His partner survived. The multilevel
dive was conducted using air as a travel mix and a
bottom mix of EAN 40. The maximum depth of the dive was
32 m/104 ft. The dive team staged into the system on an
aluminum 80 cf/2,264 l air stage which was breathed for
approximately 15 minutes into the dive before the switch
to EAN 40. About 60 minutes into the dive, the surviving
partner turned to see the other diver stop and to begin
shaking before losing consciousness and spitting the
regulator out of his mouth. His partner tried
unsuccessfully to resuscitate the diver and then
attempted to swim the unconscious diver out of the cave.
Soon realizing that his efforts were futile, the
surviving diver exited the cave to get help. The body
was recovered a short time later by a recovery team.
Investigators believe that an oxygen
seizure was the cause of death. Though PO2s
for most of the multilevel dive were at or below 1.4 atm
(25 m/83 ft on EAN 40), due to the configuration of the
cave, there were multi-minute portions of the dive with
PO2s as high as 1.5-1.7 atm (29-32 m/95-105
ft) placing the profile outside of the NOAA Oxygen
Limits (a maximum P02 of 1.6 atm) which are based on
moderate diver work levels. The team was reported to be
swimming hard in the upstream system, which would have
resulted in CO2 buildup and possibly
increased the diver’s sensitivity to convulsion. The
family refused an autopsy.
La Jolla Canyon, California—Two
untrained recreational divers reportedly died in La
Jolla Canyon attempting to beat their personal best
depth records of 61 m/200 ft which they had made in the
Canyon the week before using recreational scuba
equipment. Their goal was to hit 76 m/250 ft.
Apparently, neither of the divers had training or
experience at these depths and had not done prior
work-up dives. According to newspaper reports, when
questioned by friends about their “record” dive the
previous weekend, one of the friends said the divers got
narked “big time,” and rather than dangerous or stupid,
they believed their continuing push for depth was
“cool.” Both of the divers were recreational divemasters.
One of the divers had just received his divemaster
certification earlier that month.
La Jolla Canyon begins about 130
m/450 ft offshore in 14 m/45 ft of water and quickly
drops through a series of slopes and ledges to about 91
m/300 ft. The team apparently swam out alone sometime in
the afternoon, covering probably about 549-732 m/600-800
yards on the surface (probably building up CO2
levels) before dropping into the canyon. They were
conducting the dive on single aluminum 80’s without a
stage or a pony bottle, and there was no descent/ascent
line or surface support personnel. (Assuming a
conservative surface consumption rate of 0.75-1.0 cf/min.
[21-28 l/min] the transit to and from depth would have
required between 30-40 cf/849-1,1132 l for each diver
not including time on the bottom, decompression
requirements, their surface swim, or reserves in the
event of an emergency.) Since their bodies were never
recovered and there were no witnesses, we can only
speculate as to their dive and the exact events that led
to their deaths.
Lake Jocassee, South Carolina—An
experienced cave diver suffered an oxygen seizure during
decompression following a special mix open water dive to
300 f/91m in Lake Jocassee, South Carolina, was treated
for freshwater drowning and luckily survived due to
excellent top-side support.
Utilizing a pair of large inflatables
for surface support, safety divers, and a continuous
ascent/decompression line system, the 8-minute planned
jump to 91 m/300 ft was conducted on trimix 14/33 (14%
oxygen, 33% He, balance N2. Max. working PO2
= 1.41 atm) with two intermediate mixes, an EAN 32 (@130
f/40m) and an EAN 60 (@ 60 f/18m) to be followed by
surface supplied oxygen at 6 m/20 ft. Backup oxygen
bottles were carried by team members. Total planned
decompression time was 61 minutes.
Prior to reaching the 6 m/20 ft
oxygen stop, PO2‘s on the dive were at or
below about 1.4 atm with the exception of 2 minutes
at/37-40 m/120-130 ft (PO2 = 1.5-1.6 atm),
and 6 minutes at 50-60 f/15-18m (PO2 =
1.5-1.7) during the intermediate gas switches. The dive
team discussed and dismissed the need for “air breaks”
(the practice of breathing air for 5 minutes every 20-25
minutes during oxygen decompression which greatly
reduces sensitivity to convulsions) as unnecessary
during the oxygen decompression phase of the dive due to
the short time (36 minutes) involved.
The dive proceeded as planned without
incident until about 20 minutes into the oxygen
decompression. The diver unclipped from the
decompression line, switching to his oxygen stage, in
order to swim over and check on a second team on a
nearby compression line on the second support boat. He
did not communicate what he was doing to his partner,
who lost visual contact with the diver as soon as he
swam off. Swimming slowly, the diver lost some buoyancy,
drifted down about 11 m/35 ft (PO2 = 2.06)
and he believes he dozed off for several moments due to
his excessive fatigue. He startled awake when his
breathing became abnormal and quickly checked his depth
as the onslaught of oxygen toxicity began.
Fortunately, experience took over.
Holding his regulator in his mouth with one hand, he hit
his power inflator with the other as the seizure began.
His actions saved his life. As he ascended uncontrolled,
he was aware of losing his regulator at about 3 m/10 ft
and hit the surface convulsing, face down, and helpless
before losing consciousness. The diver was rescued
within moments of surfacing by the team’s support
personnel. His breathing had stopped. CPR was applied,
and the diver was resuscitated. He was soon evacuated to
a nearby hospital, treated for freshwater drowning, and
recovered.
Though the diver’s profile would
normally be considered light from an oxygen tolerance
perspective, the short spike to 11 m/35 ft coupled with
the lack of an “air break” apparently led to trouble.
Extenuating circumstances appear to be his
condition before making the dive. A paramedic by
profession, the diver had just come off of a 4-hour
shift and had less than 2 hours of sleep the night
before the dive. Fluid intake had been minimal and
little food had been consumed over the previous 14
hours. Diver fatigue was believed to be the main factor
in the accident.
August 1992
Andrea Doria,
New York—A very
experienced cave diver omitted approximately 68 minutes
of decompression rather than executing a “free-floating”
hang while conducting a solo air dive on the Andrea
Doria and suffered a severe case of decompression
illness. The diver was wearing double 104 pumped with
air and an oxygen stage bottle for decompression, and
there was a surface-supplied O2 system on
board. Apparently, the dive had gone near
picture-perfect in the 10-12 ft. visibility water when
the diver’s guideline broke at his turn, and he was
swept off the wreck by the heavy current. After spending
precious minutes swimming hard at about 58 m/190 ft to
regain the wreck and find the anchor line, the diver was
forced to begin his ascent due to his dwindling gas
supplies. In the resulting confusion, he neglected to
deploy the reel and lift bag that he was carrying. He
ascended without a line and completed his 15 m/50 ft
stop and ascended to 12 m/40 ft at which point he had
minimal air in his doubles.
At that point, the diver reported he
did not think of using his upline and bag and elected to
surface rather than to ascend and pull his oxygen
decompression free-floating in the current and risk
getting separated from the boat. Upon surfacing his
computer showed 31 minutes of runtime. The onset of
symptoms was immediate and severe and progressed to
include nausea, vomiting, and vertigo. Oxygen and fluids
were administered immediately by a fellow diver and RN,
and the diver was evacuated for treatment by helicopter.
Reportedly, he spent nearly 40 hours in the chamber and
was released with a slight deficit in his left leg. |
aquaCORPS
#5 BENT INCIDENT REPORTS (1993)
Double Fatality on the
“U-Who”[U-869]—On
October 12, 1992, two highly experienced cave divers,
Chris Rouse and Chris Rouse Jr., died exploring a U-boat
wreck known as the “U-Who” off the shore of New Jersey.
Both were trained in deep diving on air and mixed gases.
This accident has had a major impact on the technical
diving community. A formal report is being prepared, but
aquaCORPS felt it important that a preliminary
report be issued at this time.
The Rouses were diving with double
104’s filled with air for their travel and bottom mix.
Each diver also carried an 80cf/11 l aluminum tank of
60% oxygen-enriched air intermediate decompression mix,
and a 72 cf/8-liter steel tank of 100% oxygen.
After clipping off three of the four
stage bottles (probably one EAN and two oxygen) near the
anchor line, they proceeded to their point of
penetration where a tie off was made and the 4th stage
bottle (of EAN) was clipped. Shortly after entering the
wreck Chris Jr. was trapped by falling debris; loosened
silt reduced the visibility to nearly zero. Chris Sr.
entered or was already just inside the wreck and began
to dig out Chris Jr., further reducing the visibility.
After Chris Jr. was freed, the two divers were unable to
follow their line out; according to statements by Chris
Jr., and examination of their equipment, they evidently
began exploring with line for a new exit. During their
exit, it appears Chris Jr. experienced some trouble with
his primary regulator and switched to his secondary
regulator, but it was taking in water. At this time
Chris Sr. gave Chris Jr. his secondary regulator and
they continued out of the wreck. After finding the exit,
Chris Jr. noted it had taken 31 minutes for them to get
out, 11 minutes longer then their planned bottom time.
They were able to locate only one stage bottle (EAN60)
and were so low on air with no more time at depth to
search for the anchor line or the remaining bottles they
left for the surface. They may have attempted some
decompression in mid-water.
They arrived at the surface 41
minutes into the dive. Chris Sr. had limited use of his
arms and hands. His eyes were glassy and he appeared
calm but confused. While being assisted by surface help
he went into respiratory failure, and 20 minutes later
cardiac failure occurred. CPR was started immediately
and continued to the hospital (approximately 3.5 hours
later). He was pronounced dead on arrival at Bronx
Municipal Hospital. While at the surface, Chris Rouse
Jr. was hit by the tossing boat and his DIN adapter was
sheared off the manifold; he lost a large amount of air
before surface help could close the valve. He was quite
alert on the surface, yelling about the ordeal, but he
was paralyzed and had no feeling from the waist down.
After reaching the hospital, he was placed in the
chamber on USN Treatment Table 6A, during which he
reportedly regained some feeling in his legs along with
an increased level of pain. Early in the first air break
at 1.9 atm (30 fsw), his heart stopped and resuscitation
was unsuccessful.
Their bottom timer displayed a max
depth of 68 m/223 ft for 41 minutes. Chris’s air tanks
had 250 psi, and Chris Jr. had 150 psi. The one stage
bottle recovered had 1200 psi. The investigation into
this accident is still ongoing and a detailed report is
being prepared for publication. Readers are reminded
that hasty conclusions may be premature. Submitted
by Denny Willis. Willis is a NAU/Instructor (#6988) and
has been teaching since 1976. |
aquaCORPS
#6 Computing INCIDENT REPORTS (1993)
February 1993
Botany Bay, Australia—A
diver experienced an out-of-gas emergency as a result of
equipment failure, lost buoyancy control during descent,
and blew to the surface following an 18-minute, 64 m/207
ft air dive on the SS Woniora, omitting 44
minutes of decompression. The surface support team
returned the diver to the water within 5 minutes for
in-water oxygen therapy beginning at 6 m/20 ft. After
completing 30 minutes of oxygen decompression at 6 m/20
ft, she ascended to 3 m/10 ft where she completed an
additional 30 minutes. She surfaced without apparent
symptoms, was placed on surface oxygen, and evacuated to
a hyperbaric center, which was 30 minutes away.
The diver presented mild neurological
decompression illness on admission and was treated on an
USN Table 6 with two follow-up treatments of two hours
each at 9 m/30 ft on subsequent days. She was discharged
three days later with no apparent residual symptoms.
Although in-water therapy was not condoned by hyperbaric
officials, they stated that the diver probably would
have presented in a far more serious condition had it
not been carried out. Submitted by Rob Cason, Fun
Dive Centre, Sidney, Australia.
March 1993
Merida, Mexico—A
full cave and nitrox instructor suffered an oxygen
convulsion during a deep air dive in a sinkhole in
Mexico and drowned. His partner, who experienced CNS
toxicity warning signs during the dive, and a safety
diver survived. The two later recovered the body.
The team had planned a 20-minute air
dive in excess of 71 m/230 ft—the depth of the saltwater
halocline—in a cavernous open-water sinkhole near Merida
on the Yucatan Peninsula. Because of the difficulty in
obtaining helium mixes in Mexico, the team decided to
conduct the dive on air followed by oxygen for
decompression. Both were experienced deep divers. A
weighted descent line was rigged for navigation and for
staging oxygen and extra air cylinders. The safety diver
was to descend with the team to 67 m/220 ft, ascend to a
shallower depth and wait for the dive team.
After a long, slow descent past the
halocline, the team tied into the descent line to
explore the well at a leisurely pace. Informed sources
estimated their maximum depth to be close to 91 m/300 ft
(A PO2 in excess of 2.0 atm—ed.).
The surviving partner experienced a tingling in his
lower lip and turned back to call the dive only to see
the diver headed back as well. When he reached the line,
he sensed that the diver was in trouble. The diver
grabbed the line and began a hurried hand-over-hand
ascent. The partner reached the diver, gained control,
and they began to ascend together. The diver continued
to pull on the line creating slack and getting himself
tangled. His partner cut him free. The diver then
darted, got tangled again, and apparently convulsed. By
the time his partner reached him the diver’s regulator
was out of his mouth. At that point they were still
deeper than 71 m/230 ft. After repeated attempts to
force the regulator back into the diver’s mouth with no
success, the surviving partner realized the diver was
gone and, leaving the body entangled in the line,
ascended to complete his decompression. Following
decompression, the partner and safety diver were able to
pull up the line and recover the body.
March 1993
Pompano Beach, Florida—An
experienced 47-year-old spearfisherman apparently
switched to his oxygen regulator by mistake while
chasing down a grouper at about 68 m/220 ft during a
deep air dive, convulsed, and drowned. He was found on
the railing of the RB Johnson with his
regulator out of his mouth by his partner, who was
reportedly diving trimix. The body was later recovered
by the charter boat captain.
The diver was wearing twin
“independently configured” 100 cubic foot cylinders, and
an oxygen pony for decompression. Using this
configuration, a diver must repeatedly switch regulators
during the dive in order to balance the gas supplies.
Though the diver used a distinct oxygen regulator which
was labeled in green, his primary, secondary, and oxygen
regulators were banded together and mounted over his
right shoulder. It is believed he mistakenly switched to
his oxygen regulator in the heat of the chase (A PO2
of 7-8 atm), having speared his first grouper at 74
m/240 ft earlier in the dive. He convulsed, spitting the
regulator out of his mouth, and drowned. Vomit and blood
were found in his mask.
May 1993
St. Croix,
US Virgin Islands—A deep air diver was
reported missing and is presumed dead after he failed to
return from an afternoon solo dive. The diver had been
training for some time in hopes of setting a new record
for deep air diving and had spoken about his plans to
several individuals in the States who tried to dissuade
him. According to local observers, the diver had made
air dives in the 144-160 m/470-520 ft range, qualifying
him for some kind of record.
The diver was last seen late on a
Wednesday afternoon when he typically made solo dives.
Later, friends found his car parked near the dive site,
Twin Palms, and reported him missing when he did not
show up by 9:30 pm. The local dive store apparently said
he went out at 4 PM. Search divers were unable to find
the body. Excerpted from Compuserve and the Virgin
Island Daily News.
May 1993
Key West, Florida—A
diver mistakenly switched to his “labeled and
color-coded” oxygen regulator instead of EAN 36 at his
28 m/90 ft decompression stop following a 25-minute
exposure to 64 m/210 ft conducted on trimix 17/50. The
diver seized approximately 4 minutes later at his 21
m/70 ft stop during the mix training dive and spit his
regulator out of his mouth.
A second diver was on the scene in
seconds and, unable to reinsert the regulator and having
a substantial decompression obligation, inflated the
diver’s BCD and sent him to the surface. The diver was
picked up immediately by the surface support crew and
displayed faint irregular breathing. He was cut out of
his equipment, lifted on the boat, and placed on oxygen
when he became semi-conscious. Emergency evacuation
procedures were initiated and the boat left to
rendezvous with an ambulance dockside about 50 minutes
away.
The diver regained full consciousness
within about 15 minutes and did not exhibit DCI
symptoms. He was evacuated from the hospital to a
chamber within an hour and a half. Still not exhibiting
symptoms, he was treated with a Table 6. The diver has
little memory of events following his/27 m/90 ft stop
until regaining consciousness at the surface.
Apparently, his only warning was a vague feeling that
something was wrong after switching to O2.
Reported by Key West Diver Inc. |
aquaCORPS
#7 C2 INCIDENT REPORTS (1994)
July 1993
South Coast of England—An
experienced wreck diver failed to surface following an
air dive to 58 m/190 ft on the Merchant Royal
and is assumed dead. The diver had become separated from
her partner on the wreck who surfaced with the minimum
required decompression and raised the alarm. Though
visibility was excellent, the body was never found
during the ensuing two-day search. The diver had been
wearing twin 12-liter independent cylinders (about 200
cf/5,660 l) and a pony with decompression gas. She dived
regularly to these depths and was reported to be a
strong dependable diver. Submitted by Simon & Polly
Tapson, London, England.
August 1993
Sydney, Australia—A
wreck diver lost consciousness during a 15-minute deep
air dive to 78 m/254 ft on the paddle tug Koputai
and drowned. The diver lost consciousness while
returning to the anchor line after a 15-minute planned
bottom time to make his ascent. Though his three
partners attempted to ascend with the diver in tow, they
were unable to maintain a regulator in his mouth and he
subsequently drowned. The team proceeded to lift the
unconscious diver to 15 m/50 ft and released him to the
surface. Surface support personnel radioed for emergency
assistance/evacuation.
The diver did not regain
consciousness and was pronounced dead a short time
later. Though the Coroner’s report has not been
released, CNS toxicity (working PO2= 1.85
atm) compounded by possible CO2 build-up and
narcosis—characteristic of deep air dives—is suspected
as the primary causal factor. The incident raised
government concerns about local deep diving practices.
Though mix training has just gotten started in
Australia, most deep dives are still conducted on air.
Submitted by Richard Taylor, Sydney, Australia.
September 1993
Little River, Florida
—A novice cave diver ran out
of gas and drowned on a solo dive in
the Little River cave system. The diver was found with
no air in either of his independent 104 tanks
about 1300 feet back in the cave on the
mainline. Though the individual frequently made
solo dives he was not diving with a buddy
bottle.
The diver was known to use “creative”
gas management rules outside of the basic tenets of cave
diving, and on at least one occasion had explained the
gas management strategy he utilized to a
group of cave students. Basically, the diver
reserved sufficient gas to exit from
known points in the cave using the outflow in the
system. The problem is that liberalized gas management
rules such as this leave no margin for
error or the unexpected compared to the
golden “rule of thirds” or better (i.e. use at least 1/3
of your gas for penetration and exit on
the remaining 2/3).
Members of the recovery team
speculate that the diver ventured into
an unfamiliar part of the cave and got lost in the low,
silty tunnels and “tees.” Having silted out the area,
the diver spent precious time searching
for the main line connection and likely missed the
tee on the way back. Eventually he found his
way to the line, but it was too late. A
long time aquaCorps subscriber, he had renewed
his subscription only a week before.
September 1993
Wakulla County, Florida—A
very experienced 24-year-old cave diver lost
consciousness and drowned while negotiating a
restriction on the way back to the
team’s decompression stages following a deep mix
exploration push to about 66 m/220 ft with a
planned bottom time of 120 minutes.
The inbound leg of the dive, which
was the latest in a series of progressive pushes
intended to connect several major sinks, had gone
as scheduled. The team of three reached the end
of the line in good time and added
about 800 feet of line (7800 feet back at
a depth of about 66 m/220 ft) when the diver
unexpectedly called the dive. The team
turned for home. Upon reaching their staging area,
the lead diver turned to see the diver tangled
in the line struggling with his stage.
The third diver freed him and they continued,
although the diver appeared shaken.
As the diver negotiated the
shortcut restriction at about 61 m/200 ft deep
and 2000 feet back in the cave, then
his scooter prop caught and ate the line, halting his
forward motion and pinned him between the floor and the
ceiling just as his stage bottle ran
out of gas. He flashed an Out-of-Gas signal to the lead
diver, who responded with his long hose. Thinking
the diver was out of gas (he actually had 1000
psi in his 104s and 1000 psi in his
other stage), the lead diver passed him a stage
bottle. The diver gave back the long hose and
jettisoned his old stage. At this point
the cave silted up and the lead diver lost visual
contact.
From the rear, the third diver saw
his teammate wedged in the restriction and initiated
touch contact as the cave silted out. The third diver
squeezed his leg to indicate “Go” and the diver kicked.
He backed off then squeezed again, with no response. He
tried to pry him free and at some point, realized the
diver was dead. The third diver unclipped his scooter
and stage bottles and was able to squeeze around the
unconscious diver in the cloud of silt and made physical
contact with the lead diver. Silted out and under the
time constraints of their gas supply, the remaining two
divers linked up and motored back to the safety of the
decompression bottles. The two had about six hours of
decompression remaining.
The incident generated serious
discussion in the cave community regarding the role of a
dive team and how much push is too much. Reportedly the
deceased diver couldn’t sleep the night before, had ill
feelings about the dive, and exhibited anxiety. He told
at least one person that this was the last of these
dives he would do. It was reported that the diver was
“off” that day and that he may have chosen to go ahead
so as not to miss the “big” dive and lose status.
October 1993
Honduras—A
novice deep diver lost consciousness and drowned during
a “deep air” wall dive beyond 92 m/300 ft. The diver and
his two partners, all experienced recreational
instructors, were attending a combination charter and
week-long seminar on “Advanced Diving,” and had been
conducting progressively deeper air dives between 61-91
m/200-300 ft during the week. Though the boat apparently
had a “You’re on your own” policy, a mix instructor on
the cruise made a “deep air” dive with the team to about
77 m/250 ft to check them out and give them pointers on
their technique. He reported that based on their skills,
he discouraged them from diving deeper. The captain was
concerned as well. In fact, a fourth diver associated
with the team was reportedly asked not to dive deep or
his trip would be curtailed.
The divers were utilizing dual
independently rigged 80 cf/11-liter cylinders and
decompressing on air (oxygen was apparently not
available). The dive was planned for 5 minutes to 91
m/300 ft using USN Exceptional Exposure Tables with
backup tables to 15 minutes. The diver was carrying a
video camera to film the team’s escapades and was the
only member of the team with a decompression tool—a
computer—for depths beyond 91 m/300 ft.
According to one of the team, the
group overstayed their planned bottom time by a minute
or so, and then the diver and one partner began to drift
further down the wall (beyond 91 m/300 ft). Having
emptied his first cylinder “unexpectedly” (the divers
did not switch regulators during the dive to balance
their gas supply) and feeling that the dive “was
starting to go wrong,” the shallow member of the team
executed a “rocket ascent” (of 100 fpm or more) that he
had learned in the course to “get out of the danger
zone,” and ascended to his first stop. Apparently,
moments later, the first diver lost consciousness
somewhere around 99-107 m/325-350 ft. His partner began
to haul him up using his BCD for added buoyancy when one
of his single cylinders also ran out of gas. He lost his
grip on the unconscious diver while switching regulators
and due to buoyancy differences was separated from the
diver. Short on gas he ascended and survived. The
diver’s body was never recovered off the wall.
October 1993
Pompano Beach, Florida—A
diver experienced what appeared to be the first
onslaught of a CNS oxygen toxicity hit during an air
dive to 70 m/228 ft on the RV Johnson, was able
to make a rapid ascent to about 32 m/105 ft, and
survived. The diver and two others descended towards the
wreck in order to set the anchor. Missing the wreck, and
being deeper than they had planned, the divers began a
hard swim at about 70 m/228 ft (PO2 =1.66 atm) for about
5 minutes out of what was planned to be a 10-minute
bottom time. He reached the mast at 58 m/190 ft and tied
off the anchor.
As he was working, he got a severe
pain in his molar, his lip began twitching, and his jaw
started chattering. Feeling a convulsion coming on, he
held his regulator in his mouth, tried to signal to his
partners, and hit his BCD inflator just as he began to
lose his vision and experience a mild convulsion. The
symptoms began to clear during the rapid ascent, and he
was able to regain control at about 35-37 m/115-120 ft
and stopped himself at about 32 m/105 ft. The diver was
then able to pull himself together.
He completed his scheduled
decompression and included a 20 f/6 m oxygen “hedge”
stop on EAN 80 (80% O2, balance N2).
He surfaced without incident. An extenuating factor may
have been the prescription decongestant, Entex LA. The
drug had been used by the diver at recommended doses
during the preceding week of diving. He had previously
bought a regulator retainer strap but “forgot” to bring
it that day. According to the Divers Alert network (DAN)
there is no data to link the drug to the incident.
October 1993
High Springs, Florida,
— An experienced cave diver
lost consciousness at the start of a pleasure cave dive
at Devil’s Ear in Ginnie Springs and drowned. The dive
was intended to be a fun dive to practice scooter
techniques. The team of two mounted their double stage
bottles and scooters and descended into the “Ear” of the
cave against the normal outflow. The lead diver went
through the first restriction after exchanging OKs with
his partner, who appeared preoccupied. The lead diver
got to the “Lips” of the cave about 61 m/200 ft into the
cave, turned, and waited. The diver, his dive buddy,
wasn’t there. Not seeing any lights, he turned and
backtracked and found the diver unconscious with his
regulator out of his mouth in about 30 to 40 feet of
water.
The diver was immediately brought to
the surface, CPR was initiated, and the diver was flown
to Shands Hospital where he was placed on life support
but never regained consciousness, and was pronounced
dead the following morning. The Coroner’s report didn’t
shed light on the cause of his trauma. He had no history
of heart problems, no predisposing medical conditions,
and no signs of embolism. Individuals can only guess
that the diver had a serious problem, turned to exit
following the floor of the cave, missed the exit, lost
consciousness and drowned. |
aquaCORPS
#8 HARD INCIDENT REPORTS (1994)
March 1994
Huautla Expedition Fatality Report:
On March 27, 1994, British cave diver Ian Roland died
whilst exploring the terminal sump in the Sótana de San
Agustín cave, part of the Systema Huautla, in Oaxaca,
Mexico. A member of the expedition team, Roland was
diving the prototype rebreather system under development
by Bill Stone.
At 8 AM on the 27th, Roland had
dived from Camp Five for a 380 m/1246 ft penetration.
Dive time was 53 minutes at a maximum depth of 26 m/85
ft. At 11 AM Kenny Broad continued the exploration,
surfacing in a large air bell at 430 m/1410 ft. The
chamber was approx. 20 meters wide and 20 meters high
(66 ft by 66 ft) with large sandbars. There was no sound
of running water or air movement. Kenny returned to base
without exiting the water. At 4 PM Roland set out to
explore the chamber. He estimated a return time of three
hours but said not to worry for six.
At 7 PM Broad, concerned by Roland’s
absence, began to assemble the second rebreather rig. At
10 PM he set out to Camp Three to alert the support
party. They returned to Camp Five in due course and
completed the assembly and checking of the second rig.
At 12:15 AM on March 28, Broad began the dive through
the chamber. He carried emergency medical supplies
(Roland was diabetic), food, and bivouac equipment. At
12:41 AM he surfaced in the chamber and noted footprints
on the sandbar. He swam alongside the bar, in clear
water, and continued beyond its end for 10 m/33 ft at
which point he located Roland’s body resting on its
right side. Resuscitation was futile.
Broad noted that the line reel
appeared to have fallen out of Roland’s hand. Four out
of five tanks were full, and the control system was
functional. The mouthpiece was in closed position and
out of the mouth. The O2 “setpoint” was 0.5
atmospheres; the O2 control valve was in
manual shutoff position and the PO2 was 0.17
atmospheres (heliox 14/86). There was no sign of
struggle or distress. The body was recovered by team
members, assisted by Mexican cavers and members of a
British expedition, in an operation which took six days.
Observations during the recovery
showed that the control system was still active, and the
heads up and buddy displays were both flashing red,
indicating PO2 below 0.21 atm. The left
diluent tank was empty. Black box data records that were
retrieved from the rig show that the tank was emptied
over a seven-minute interval following Roland’s loss of
the mouthpiece as the rig attempted to maintain
counterlung volume. Functional tests were made on the
rig back at the base. All systems were operational and
within specification.
Roland had eaten a normal breakfast
in the morning but was suffering from mild diarrhea. He
had taken two food bars which were not eaten. There was
no sign that he had doffed and donned the rig when
leaving the water. These items had a combined weight of
approximately 140 pounds, therefore traversing the air
bell would have involved a significant exertion. The
oxygen injector unit on the rig was manually switched
off. This is a common procedure upon surfacing in order
to conserve oxygen. Normal procedure would have been to
re-enable the unit upon re-entering the water.
Given that Roland’s rebreather
appeared to be fully functional, it was initially
presumed that his death was due to operator error based
on the closed position of the O2 valve.
However, black box data clearly indicated that at the
time of what was apparently an uncontrolled descent from
the surface to 2.8 m/9 ft, the PO2 of the
breathing mix was 0.24 atm, i.e. not hypoxic, indicating
Roland’s blackout was due to some other cause. The
observed PO2 of 0.17 atm resulted from
purging of the gas processor with 14/86 heliox during
the descent. Its subsequent stability at 0.17 atm
indicates that Roland was not breathing from the rig
following initiation of the descent.
Based on his
dive line, it was clear that Roland was returning to the
sandbar from the head of Sump 2 after apparently
realizing something was wrong. Given that Roland was a
diabetic and had not recently eaten, and that heavy
exercise and mental impairment were present (evidenced
by the failure to re-enable to O2 valve), it
has been concluded that the blackout was caused by
hypoglycemia and/or related events, such as arrhythmia
or seizure. Roland was an extremely meticulous cave
diver and had logged more than 60 hours on rebreathers.
He was, however, a recently-diagnosed diabetic and did
not have a blood sugar glucose test kit in the cave.
Submitted by Rob Parker and Bill Stone.
March 1994
Sydney, Australia—A
very experienced technical diver, PADI and NAUI
instructor and ANDI nitrox instructor trainer,
mistakenly breathed his EAN 50 (50% O2,
balance nitrogen) decompression mix during a wreck dive
to 50 m/165 ft (PO2 = 3.0) on the wreck of
the Coolooli and convulsed and drowned 18
minutes into the dive. Efforts to resuscitate the
47-year-old diver were unsuccessful.
The diver was diving air supplemented
with an EAN 50 mix for decompression—a common practice
among Sydney wreck divers. Reportedly, the diver carried
both his bottom and decompression mix on his back and
ran both through a switchable manifold block. Several
colleagues apparently talked about the shortcomings of
this configuration with the diver without success. An
analysis of the contents of the tanks showed that the
diver breathed EAN50 during the duration of the dive. He
convulsed just as he and his two dive partners began
their ascent.
April 1994
Abaco, The Bahamas—Three
untrained open water divers ran out of gas and drowned
in the Big Boil Blue Hole cave system. None of the
divers were cavern or cave certified.
It was reported that the three divers
entered the low and silty Big Boil cave with only two
guidelines. Two of the divers carried single 72 cf/8-liter
tanks. The third carried a single 80 cf/11-liter tank.
The team leader, who reportedly had “dived Big Boil many
times before,” made the dive without a depth gauge, BC,
knife, or redundant second stage. The team apparently
made about a 46 m/150 ft penetration to a depth of 23
m/75 ft.
Two of the bodies were recovered on
the main line at what is believed to have been their
point of maximum penetration. One of the divers was
tangled in the line. After an extensive search, the body
of the team leader was located in a restricted side
passage approximately 46 m/150 ft off the main line.
Submitted by Al Pertner.
May 1994
Grand Bahamas—Two
very experienced divers who were not cave certified got
lost in a popular Blue Hole during a liveaboard dive
trip, ran out of gas, and drowned. Neither diver was
running a line or carrying multiple lights. One of the
divers was found within 30 m/100 ft of the cavern zone
in about 28 m/90 ft. The second body was recovered by a
cave recovery team the next day at about 122 m/400 ft
from the cave entrance in about 37 m/120 ft of water.
Both were wearing single 80 cf/11-liter tanks. It is not
known if the bodies were separated by the tidal flow in
the system or if the team had been separated during the
dive.
The cavern zone at the site is often
dived by recreational divers from a liveaboard. A
partner of one of the deceased who was on the dive boat
believed that the two “had no intention of making a cave
dive,” and in fact, had left line reels on the boat. One
of the divers was going shell collecting. The other was
apparently planning to shoot video. The partner believes
that the two got intrigued and ventured out of the
cavern zone into the cave system. Ironically, the two
were considered the most experienced divers on the
liveaboard trip. One of the divers was a former
commercial and military diver who was open circuit mix
trained, and who had worked as a divemaster with a
technical diving operation. The other was a dive store
owner, a 20-year instructor who was in the process of
completing a cave course.
June 1994
Scituate, Rhode Island, USA—My
son Jonathan asked if he could scuba in our backyard
pool. Jon is almost 12 years old and has been using
scuba in the pool for two years. I didn’t really want
to, but after his relentless asking, I gave in. It was
around 7 PM so instead of using his usual 30 cf/849 l
pony bottle, I grabbed a yellow 14 cf/396 l pony for him
from the stack. He geared up and we went in the pool.
I sat on the diving board as Jon
entered the low end of the pool. My younger son Byron
sat on the stairs. Jon went underwater and, after a few
minutes, something seemed wrong. I went to the low end
of the pool and Byron shouted, “Something’s wrong, Dad.”
Byron grabbed the skimmer pole and poked Jon, who was
floating face down. He didn’t respond. I jumped in the
water and pulled him up. He was blue and not breathing.
I got him out of the pool onto the deck and started CPR.
He had a pulse but was not breathing. After rescue
breathing for what seemed like an eternity, I was able
to restore his breathing. My wife Jean had called 911
(U.S. emergency hotline) and the rescue personnel
arrived several minutes later.
As I was explaining what happened to
one of the rescue team, I looked into the pool and saw
the yellow 14 cf/396 l pony floating where Jon had been.
Then it struck me like a ton of bricks. When I first
started using argon gas for suit inflation, I committed
a cardinal sin: I failed to paint the bottle brown or to
properly label it as containing argon. After obtaining a
proper argon bottle, I thought I had drained the pony,
but I hadn’t. Somehow I had it mixed up with my other
pony bottles. When Jonathan went diving, I had picked
that bottle out of the stack. It was lack of caution,
and it almost cost me my son. Thank goodness, Jonathan
has completely recovered with no lasting effects.
It is of the utmost importance that all types of gases
be properly marked, that the required types of values
and regulators be used, and that different gases be
stored independently of each other [Note
that Compressed Gas Association [CGA]
conventions require that special connectors be used for
each type of gas to avoid mix-ups—ed.].
I consider myself a careful and responsible person,
however negligence, whether intentional or not, can be
deadly in our sport. If writing this letter averts just
one tragedy, then the horror we went through will not be
in vain.
Submitted
by Bill Delmonico, Scituate, Rhode Island. |
aquaCORPS #9 Wreckers Incident Reports (1995)
April 1994
What Happened To Sheck Exley?
By Bill Hamilton, Gordon Daughtery,
Ann Kristovich, and Jim Bowden. Excerpted with
permission from the Undersea Hyperbaric Medical
Society’s newsletter, Pressure.
On April 6, 1994, well-known and
much-respected cave diver and explorer Sheck Exley died
attempting to reach the bottom of the Zacatón sinkhole
in northeastern Mexico. This physiological analysis
relates the conditions and events of the dive as well as
we can reconstruct them, and it speculates on possible
causes of his death. It is neither intended to endorse
or glorify record-setting exploration nor to judge it in
any way; that stands on its own merits as the
prerogative of the explorers. These are the facts of the
case as well as we can put them together, plus some
speculation.
Exley, 45, died while exploring a
sinkhole, or cenote, at Zacatón, located in northeastern
Mexico, not far from Mante, the site of his previous
record dives. At a depth of 332 m/1080 ft or more,
Zacatón may be the deepest water-filled pit in the
world. Exley was diving with Jim Bowden as part of
Bowden’s “El Proyecto de Buceo Profundo” project. On the
day of the fatal dive, Bowden and Exley dived
independently, but at the same time and with similar
techniques.
Bowden and Exley descended on
separate weighted guidelines 25 to 30 feet apart. Bowden
started a few seconds before Exley; the descent was
expected to take 10 to 12 minutes. The divers kept track
of the line visually. From a decompression and gas
management point of view, the more rapid the descent the
better, but a rapid descent potentially may exacerbate
the effect of High Pressure Nervous Syndrome (HPNS) (See
aquaCORPS Journal N8, “High pressure nervous
Syndrome,” by R.W. Bill Hamilton). Both divers had
experienced HPNS symptoms on previous dives and planned
to slow their descents to less than about 100 ft/min (30
m/min.) at about 229 m/680 ft. Air was breathed by both
divers to 92 m/290 ft at which point Exley paused to
“stage” his air cylinder by clipping it to the line at
290 ft. Bowden used a small pony cylinder carried on his
back as his air supply. The divers switched to a
“travel” mix, trimix 10.5/50 (10.5% O2, 50%
He, bal. N2), for the descent from 89-179
m/290 to 580 ft.
Both Bowden and Exley selected a
bottom mix that would produce a tolerable PO2
of less than 2.0 atm and an equivalent narcosis depth
(END, the equivalent depth on air) of 84 m/274 ft at 298
m/970 ft. These levels were accepted by both divers
since the exposure to maximum depth would be brief.
(Note that a higher PO2 would minimize the
lengthy decompression at the cost of increasing
the risk of CNS oxygen toxicity. Technical divers are
recommended to run their working PO2s
at less than 1.4 atm. See aquaCORPS N7,
“Blueprint for Survival Revisited”—ed.)
Bowden used trimix 6.4/31 and Exley used trimix 6/29
(mixed by adding helium to air). Both divers used gas
from the back-mounted bottom mix supply to fill their
buoyancy compensators (BCs).
Sheck carried a total of about 369 cf
of bottom mix in two large back-mounted tanks. He also
had two side-mounted tanks (aluminum “80s” filled to
3600 psi) of trimix 10.5/50. Jim carried 426 cf of
trimix 6.4/31 in two back-mounted tanks and in one-side
mounted aluminum “80” tank. A second side-mounted “80”
tank contained trimix 10.5/50. Tanks filled with
specific decompression mixtures had been staged on each
individual’s descent line during the two days prior to
the dive. The extended decompression called for mixes of
air, enriched air nitrox, argon-oxygen, and oxygen.
It is difficult to overemphasize the
importance of gas management and careful gas planning
for a dive of this magnitude. At 30 atmospheres (970
ft/298 m) the amount of gas in a normal 72cf scuba tank
is reduced to less than 2.5 effective cubic feet—good
for 2 or 3 minutes, less if exercising. Bowden and Exley
followed a rigorous pattern of breathing, taking slow,
deep breaths at a practiced rate in order to optimize
the tradeoff between excess gas consumption and
hypoventilation—which leads to CO2 buildup. A
small change in the breathing pattern, especially in
rate, can quickly alter usage calculations.
Bowden checked his gas volume at
about 268 m/874 ft. He had expected to have
approximately 1800 psi (pounds per square inch) at this
point and had only 1000. He realized the need to turn
the dive and arrested his descent at the 276 m/898 ft
mark. On the line during decompression, Bowden observed
Exley’s unused decompression tanks and correctly assumed
that Exley had not survived. The support team realized
this 18 minutes into the dive when the trail of bubbles
on Sheck’s line disappeared. Bowden completed his
nine-plus hours of decompression, surfaced with shoulder
pain, and was treated with oxygen, corticosteroids, and
hydration.
The post-dive analysis does not
adequately explain the shortage of gas. In December
1993, Bowden dove to 238 m/776 ft in the same system,
confirming his anticipated gas usage, as had previous
dives to 222 m/722 ft and 150 m/489 ft. Sheck’s gas
usage in an earlier dive in Bushmansgat confirmed that
his gas management technique was adequate.
Bowden concedes that even a slight
elevation in breathing rate, beyond his practiced 5-6
breaths/min, would account for the added gas consumption
on this dive. Both divers had planned to slow their
descents at 209 m/679 ft using their BCs, which consumed
precious bottom mix. Additionally, Exley, who had
started the dive with less volume than Bowden, slowed at
84 m/291 ft to drop his air tank used in the initial
stage of the dive.
The day after the dive, topside team
member Kristovich and others returned to recover
equipment from both lines. Exley’s was heavy with his
staged steel tanks, and plans were made to raise the
entire line with a pulley assist from the surface. Two
days later, during this process, Exley’s body surfaced.
The line was wrapped several times around both arms and
the valves of his side-mounted bottles. Entanglement did
not involve the back-mounted bottles, valves, mounting
plate, or BC. His mask and all other equipment were in
place. He did not have a regulator in his mouth. His BC
contained gas and the inflator was functional. His
wrist-mounted dive computer revealed a maximum depth of
270 m/879 ft. The gauge for his back-mounted tanks read
500 psi, the lowest pressure that would effectively
supply gas to the diver’s regulator at bottom depth. One
regulator of his two side-mounted tanks was unhooked,
and the pressure was 500 psi. The second tank had 3600
psi and the regulator was stowed. A later analysis of
the gases for the oxygen component revealed accuracy in
the expected mixes. An autopsy was ordered but nothing
reported explained the accident. Three days passed since
his death, and that combined with the effects of
immediate decompression made a confident postmortem
analysis difficult.
What went wrong?
We will never know for sure. Most
likely, Exley reached a point where he was unable to
inflate his BC mechanically with compressed gas and
wrapped the line around himself to stabilize himself
while sorting things out. His maximum depth was 270
m/879 ft. Exley may have ascended to 23 m/75 feet or
more, but that cannot be determined for certain from the
recovered line, since it was cut during removal from the
water. The manner in which the line was wrapped around
his upper body makes it unlikely that the entanglement
could have happened accidentally, even if a convulsion
had occurred. Exley’s experience level makes this
unlikely as well.
If we accept this, the primary
uncertainty is why or how he became so low on gas. It
was not like Exley to fail to check his gas supply, but
the physiological stress of the rapid compression (HPNS)
could have occupied him enough that he was not aware of
his situation until it was too late. The equivalent
narcotic depth of his mix was approximately 75 m/242 ft
at a depth of 270 m/879 ft, an air depth easily within
his comfort level, but also a potential contributor to
the probable cascade of problems. The gas density was 14
g/l at this depth, the equivalent of breathing air at
106 m/334 ft. Resistance to breathing plus intentional
slow breathing undoubtedly resulted in an increased
level of CO2, possibly high enough to impair
performance.
Exley had used some of his trimix
10.5/50 travel mix for the descent, but would not have
consumed gas down to 500 psi on that portion of the
dive. The travel mix could have been lost to free flow,
but more likely Exley breathed it when the supply of
trimix 6/29 was exhausted. This was a “hot” mix at 270
m/879 ft, where the pO2 would be 2.9 atm; the
equivalent narcosis depth was 130 m/423 ft, and the gas
density 21 g/l, equivalent to breathing air at 154 m/487
ft. It could have been breathed during a quick ascent if
everything else were under control. However, with the
contributing factors of the neurological hyperactivity
due to HPNS, his exertion, and an inevitable CO2
buildup, it is possible that central nervous
system (CNS) oxygen toxicity caused incapacitation or a
convulsion. A phenomenon known as “deep water blackout”
has caused many divers under less stress to lose
consciousness without convulsing. Its exact
physiological course, including the cause, is not
known.
In addition, equipment failure cannot
be entirely ruled out. A free flow of the primary
regulator at depth would have contributed to a very
rapid loss of volume and consequent reduction of vital
gas reserves.
Conclusions
The most likely sequence of events
was that Exley got behind on his gas management, ran low
on bottom gas, and could not control his buoyancy so
could not ascend. The cause is not clear, but a
combination of factors could include stress of HPNS
exacerbated by the narcotic effects of nitrogen and CO2.
He stabilized his position by wrapping his descent line
around his arms, was forced to switch to his trimix
10.5/50 at a depth of at least 246 m/800 ft, and was
subsequently incapacitated by the prevailing conditions
of HPNS, hyperoxia, exertion, CO2 buildup,
and nitrogen narcosis.
The accident could have occurred as a
physiological consequence of an illness, known or
unknown, that could lead to death or incapacitation on
any day in an individual involved in strenuous activity.
Likewise, mechanical failure, such as something that
could cause unexpectedly fast gas consumption or loss,
cannot be ruled out.
R.W. Bill Hamilton, PhD, is a
physiologist and editor of Pressure. C.G. Daugherty, MD,
is a diving doctor specializing in occupational
medicine. Ann Kristovich, DDS, is an oral surgeon and
diver and medical officer for the Zacatón project. Jim
Bowden is a diving instructor at the University of Texas
and produced much of the material used in this article.
July 1994
Bakerton Mine, Harpers Ferry, West
Virginia—A certified
cave diver apparently embolized and died when his DPV
trigger stuck in the “on” position, dragging him to the
ceiling of the cave following a gas switch from trimix
to air at a depth of 61 m/200 ft on the return leg of an
exploration run. Prior to the switch, the diver had
drained his doubles—violating the “thirds rule”—and was
forced to share gas with his partner and swim for safety
when his reserve cylinder regulator failed to function,
the regulator hose being too short to permit scootering.
The team’s objective was to explore
beyond the end of the existing permanent line at
approximately 503 m/1650 ft at a depth of 88 m/285 ft.
The team began the dive by motoring in 274 m/900 ft to a
depth of 61 m/200 ft, where they switched from air to
trimix. The dive continued to a landmark known as “The
Rock” at a depth of 78 m/250 ft at 366 m/1200 ft. At
this point the cave sloped to 83 m/270 ft over a
distance of several hundred feet (around 61 meters). The
diver dropped his DPV due to the limited depth rating of
the vehicle and swam as his partner slowly motored
along. The end of the line was reached without incident
at a depth of 86 m/285 ft and the team added another 46
m/150 ft of line to a depth of 94 m/305 ft. The dive was
called and the exit began.
The team returned to the staged DPV
at 83 m/270 ft, at which point the diver attempted to
switch to his reserve cylinder, his doubles being empty.
Apparently, his regulator would not deliver any gas.
Realizing there was a problem, his partner handed the
diver a regulator from one of his two trimix stage
bottles. However, the short hose made it impossible to
motor so the team swam their DPVs back to The Rock. At
this point, the diver switched back to his air stage,
and the team motored approximately 91 m/300 ft up the
ledge to the big room at a depth of 61 m/200 ft.
Once they entered the room, his
partner felt a DPV blast and saw a flash of light. He
turned to find the diver unconscious on the ceiling—the
DPV running circles around him. The trigger was stuck
“on.” There was blood in the diver’s mask. He cut away
the DPV and tried to hold a regulator in the
diver’s mouth with no response. The partner then
attempted to tow him out but had to leave the diver to
complete his own decompression.
The recovery team had no problems
locating and extracting the body. All equipment was
functioning properly, including all regulators. The
doubles were empty and the single 80 cf with trimix was
full with the regulator working properly.
The diver had a reputation for
violating the thirds rule, had previously run
out of gas on at least three cave dives, and
had experienced deep water blackout (where a deep air
diver is rendered unconscious) at 65 m/210 ft, while
switching from bottom mix to air during a previous dive
to the site and survived. An astute dive partner held
his regulator in his mouth until he regained
consciousness.
August 1994
Lusitania,
Kinsale, Ireland—Two
months after the Tapson expedition was completed without
incident, a 37-year-old diver blew up to the
surface from a 86 m/280 ft trimix dive
on the RMS Lusitania, incurring severe
injuries.
After descending to the wreck, the
diver’s partner began to lay line from a descent line.
The two became separated when the diver’s stage cylinder
came undone from his harness. He tried unsuccessfully to
reattach the cylinder and, in the process, became
severely entangled in the line. He then dropped a
cutting tool that he had intended to use to disentangle
himself. His partner returned to assist and cut him
free, but the diver apparently panicked and blew up to
the surface legs first. He was diving a trimix 12/26
(12% O2, 26% He, balance N2) and
his surface-to-surface interval was about 12 minutes.
The injured diver was flown to the
Naval recompression chamber at Haulbowline near Cork,
Ireland. On arrival, the injured diver was weak but
moving all limbs with good preservation of cortical
function and absolutely no evidence of pulmonary
barotrauma. His condition continued to worsen, and he
was treated with little success.
The diver had been certified for
nitrox and trimix diving less than four months before
his accident, and he had been advised by his instructor
that his experience level was insufficient to attempt
the Lusitania in 1994 without more experience.
It is unknown whether the diver, who is now a
quadriplegic, will ever walk again. |
aquaCORPS
#10 Imaging INCIDENT REPORTS (1995)
October 1994
US
Detroit, Lake
Huron, Michigan—A
deep-wreck diver made an emergency ascent from a depth
greater than 61 m/200 ft and got severely bent during a
mix dive on the US Detroit, a paddle
wheeler sunk in 1854. The injured diver had ten years’
experience diving deep wrecks in the Great Lakes, having
logged 200-300 dives, according to one of his
companions. The Detroit was discovered last
year and lies 18 miles offshore in an area of Michigan
known as The Thumb.
The diver was using trimix and
independent doubles. He switched tanks and regulators
when one of his regulators began to free flow. The diver
decided to make an emergency ascent to an oxygen supply
staged at 6 m/20 ft for decompression, but ascended to
the surface instead. The support crew administered
oxygen and called a Coast Guard helicopter for medical
evacuation. The diver underwent repeated recompression
treatments and is walking today, but suffers residual
damage from the incident.
Ethel-C,
Virginia—A diver died
during a charter expedition to the freighter Ethel-C,
sunk in 1960 off the Virginia coast. The 33-year old
diver experienced a problem during his final
decompression stop on the second dive of the day, lost
consciousness, and sank when other divers could neither
inflate his BCD nor hang onto him. His body has not been
recovered.
The former military diver was
reportedly in good physical condition and had extensive
experience diving, although he had not done deep diving
previously. He and two partners were diving air on the
wreck, which rests at 57 m/185 ft depth with the deck at
52 m/170 ft. On both dives of the day, the team
descended to 57 m/185 ft for a minute, then ascended to
52 m/170 ft for 19 minutes. A decompression schedule of
three minutes at 9 m/30 ft on air, six minutes on O2
at 6m/20 ft and 18 minutes on O2 at 3 m/10 ft
was followed. The divers had a five-hour surface
interval between the two dives.
After about 2 minutes into their 13
m/10 ft dive, the diver’s head fell and his regulator
came out of his mouth. One of his two partners came to
assist, but the other was not in the vicinity,
apparently following a different decompression schedule.
The partner tried unsuccessfully to inflate his BC using
a power inflator button, but for an unknown reason could
not, and was having difficulty holding onto the
unconscious diver, who was not clipped to the station.
Another diver came to assist and the partner ascended to
the surface to notify the boat crew of the problem. The
assisting diver could neither inflate the BC nor hold
onto the diver, who sunk to the bottom. The surviving
partner suffered decompression illness and had to be
flown out by helicopter for treatment.
Neither the partner nor the assisting
diver tried to remove the diver’s weight belt, and the
partner did not attempt to orally inflate the BC. While
the reason the BC did not inflate is unknown, one member
of the group speculated that either the diver left his
power inflator hose detached intentionally, without
informing his partner, or could have run out of air,
although the other divers believe he had 1000 psi
remaining in his tank. One report attributed the death
to O2 seizure, while another theory is that
the diver suffered from a heart condition called
Prinzmetal’s angina, which has been linked to other
diving incidents.
April 1995
Maya Cenote, Mexico—Two
experienced cave divers ran out of air and died after
missing a turn while trying to exit a cave dive in
Mexico. The two were among a group of seven cave divers
who had broken into three teams for a 45-minute dive on
air at depths no greater than 18 m/60 ft. The pair was
on the third team to enter the cave. Besides making an
incorrect turn while trying to exit, the divers failed
to use safety reels to mark a jump and apparently missed
or disregarded a series of line markers pointing the
direction to the exit.
On their way into the cave, all three
teams used a main tunnel known as B. They passed in
sequence through a T-turn, where the divers expected a
jump. However, instead the cave came to a T, with three
line markers marking the correct direction to turn while
returning to go to the exit. A member of the second team
repositioned one of the markers to make it more visible.
The third team into the cave called
their dive earliest as planned, since the first two
teams were stronger swimmers and wanted to penetrate
further. The two divers then headed back, but turned in
the wrong direction at the T, apparently missing all
three line markers at the spot. Their mistake led them
91 m/300 ft to the end of B tunnel, where another route
leads to the A tunnel. The divers headed into the A
tunnel, which also led to an exit, crossing a visual gap
without setting up a safety reel to mark their path.
The divers then made a series of
errors, apparently missing several indicators that
should have told them that they were following a
different path than the one they’d taken in. The divers
made it to the end of the line marking the start of the
A tunnel, about 30 feet from an exit. Rather than
exiting, the team headed back into the A tunnel, passing
as many as 14 line markers pointing back toward the
entrance they’d just left. The divers then swam past the
unmarked jump which might have led them back to the
other dive teams.
When the third team did not return
from the dive, the other five divers notified local
authorities and asked for help. Later that day, the
divers returned to the cave and recovered the bodies of
the two divers. Their moves were reconstructed by the
other members of the team, one of whom had entered the A
tunnel after completing his dive in an attempt to find
the missing divers. He noticed silt at the entrance,
indicating that the missing team had recently been
there, but because of low air had to turn back before
going far enough into the tunnel to find them. One of
the divers who died was 38 and had made between 75 and
100 cave dives; the other was 45 and had some 150 cave
dives.
Correction
In the incident report from Maya
Cenote, Mexico, we have two clarifications: (1) It is
not known whether or not the deceased divers actually
made it to the end of the A line; (2) The recovery team,
not the divers from the original group, re-enacted the
dive the following day. |
aquaCORPS
#11 Xplorers INCIDENT REPORTS (1995)
May 1995
Lake Wazee Brockway, Wisconsin—A
32-year-old cave diver is believed to have overexerted
himself, narked out, and drowned during a 61 m/200 ft
plus air dive in an open-pit iron mine quarry. The diver
had separated from his partner during a deep air class
dive that was planned for 46 m/150 ft.
The maximum depth limit of the
four-person class was set at 55 m/180 ft by the
instructor, but the diver and his partner had apparently
planned to “sneak off” and dive to 61 m/200 ft.
Visibility was about 6 m/20 ft. The two separated from
the class as soon as the dive began, and the instructor
remained with the two less experienced students. The
pair then traveled close to 500 feet in doubles and twin
stage bottles in 12-14 minutes in order to reach the
deep section of the quarry, several hundred feet of
which was beyond 55 m/180 ft.
The surviving diver then turned the
dive, thinking his partner was with him. He ascended to
about 49 m/160 ft, realized his partner was not
following, descended back to 58 m/190 ft, and tried to
signal to the diver with his light. However, the two had
lost contact. The partner was found drowned at 65 m/213
ft with gas in his tanks. Calculations suggest the diver
was breathing at about 2 cf/min (56 l/min) surface
equivalent. Reportedly, the deceased diver had abandoned
his partner during a previous class dive and had a
reputation for wanting to go deep.
June 1995
Matterhorn, Channel Islands,
California— A cave
diver, 7 to 8 minutes into his dive at approximately 92
m-plus/300 ft on the Matterhorn seamount, apparently
drained his 72 cf/8-liter stage of trimix and switched
back to the air in his doubles, and shortly after
rocketed to the surface, where he died of a massive
embolism. It is not known if a convulsion proceeded his
rapid ascent, though there was bruising at the back of
his head. His computer showed 11 minutes of bottom time
with a one-minute ascent.
The diver, who was not mix certified
but had some mix training and had supposedly made mix
dives, was last seen swimming off the anchor line at 92
m/300 ft by his two dive partners, who turned their
“air” dive at77 m/250 ft (PO2 = 1.8 atm) to
complete their decompression. Contrary to the dive plan,
the diver reportedly left his two partners at 77 m/250
ft, descended to 92 m/300 ft, and swam off the line
horizontally, where his partners lost sight of his
bubble trail. He was later spotted at the surface, and
his body was recovered. The team made the dive from a
25-foot inflatable approximately 25 miles offshore. The
deceased diver’s girlfriend, who was not able to operate
the vessel, was the only one on the boat during the
dive.
June 1995
Offshore Broward County, Florida—A
27-year-old diver never returned from a deep air dive to
138 m/450 ft. The dive was a practice run for his
attempt at a 169 m/550 ft deep air record scheduled for
this summer. Prior to his fatal dive, the diver
reportedly had completed twenty air dives beyond 123
m/400 ft, with a maximum depth of 147 m/480 ft. The
current record is 156 m/513 ft held by Dan Manion
(U.S.). It was reported that members of the local
technical diving community—many of whom practice extreme
deep air diving themselves—tried to discourage him from
attempting to set the record.
The dive was scheduled during the
surface interval of a recreational, two-tank dive. The
diver wore a single large-volume cylinder and an oxygen
pony for decompression. The crew rigged a descent line,
and the diver went over the side while the boat’s
recreational divers looked on. The diver had no in-water
support team.
About 7 to 8 minutes into the dive, a
crew member jumped into the water, free-dived down, and
reported that he saw bubbles. The crew member then
pulled on the line in a pre-arranged signal to ascertain
if the diver was okay. The diver supposedly returned the
pull signal. About 20 minutes later with no sign of the
diver, the captain sent down another diver to 33 m/100
ft to look for him. There were no bubbles. He was not
seen again.
July 1995
Thunder Hole Cave System, Florida—A
highly experienced cave explorer suffered an oxygen
convulsion at 25 m/80 ft and drowned after mistakenly
switching to an EAN 50 decompression mix (50% O2,
bal N2) instead of an EAN 32 at 37 m/120 ft
(PO2 = 2.3 atm) following an extended trimix
dive beyond 61 m/200 ft.
The diver and his partner were
conducting a trimix dive which utilized two nitrox mixes
(EAN 32 and EAN 50) for decompression. Reportedly, the
bottles and regulators were numbered but not marked for
depth, and the diver matched the regulators to the wrong
cylinders during set-up. The diver then staged the EAN
50 mix at 43 m/140 ft [EAN 50 has a “maximum operating
depth” (MOD) of 22 m/72.6 ft at a PO2 of 1.6
atm] instead of the EAN 32 mix, which was staged at 21
m/70 ft. During decompression, the partner heard the
diver’s scooter kick in and looked over to see the diver
convulsing at 25 m/80 ft. The partner freed the diver
from the scooter but was unable to save him. With no
support or safety divers, it wasn’t possible to get the
diver to the surface and resuscitate him.
July 1995
Moody,
Southern California—A
non-technical diving trained father and his 14-year-old
son ran out of gas and drowned while trying to free the
anchor on a wreck dive on air to the Moody at
40-43 m/130-140 ft. A third diver ran out of gas,
surfaced unconscious, and was revived. Two other divers
on the trip were bent after they shortened their
decompression.
The anchor line snagged following the
first dive on the wreck, and five individuals on the
boat decided to dive the Moody a second time
instead of cutting the line and going to dive another,
shallower wreck. The father, who organized and led the
trip, partnered up with a second diver and decided to
include his 14-year-old son, who had not yet dived that
day. The father wore a dry suit and twin steel 72s with
a single outlet manifold (no first stage redundancy)
that were not over-pressurized. The second dry suit
diver wore doubles and carried a pony. The son wore a
wet suit and carried an aluminum 80 cf/11-liter tank.
Reportedly, the team carried no decompression gas.
Visibility was said to be about 15-18 m/50-60 ft, water
temperature on the bottom was about 50-55 degrees
Fahrenheit, and there was a strong surface current that
necessitated running a leader line from the stern to the
anchor line to assist the divers’ descent. A second team
of two divers followed the three down.
After descending and working to free
the anchor line, the father’s partner surfaced about 8
to 9 minutes into the dive and told the captain they
needed more slack to free the line. He then went back
down to the bottom. Upon his return, the father
indicated he was low on air and headed up the anchor
line. The second team of divers also ascended. The son
and the partner remained.
About 12-15 minutes into the dive,
the son indicated that he was out of air. The partner
gave him a second stage and the two started up. During
their ascent, the partner ran out of air, switched to
his pony, and tried to drag the son, now presumably
drowned, up the line. The partner then ran out of air in
his pony. In the process, he apparently dropped his
weight belt before ascending unconscious to the surface.
The son’s body, being negatively buoyant, drifted back
down. It is believed that the father either witnessed
this event from the anchor line or saw the partner
ascend alone and went back down to save his son. The
father and son were found together on the bottom. |
aquaCORPS
#12 Survivors (1995)
September 1995
Blunt Avenue Quarry, Knoxville,
Tennessee—An
experienced, mix-trained cave diver and dive software
developer grabbed the wrong tanks and suffered a CNS
convulsion at depth during a 61m/200 ft body recovery.
He was brought to the surface unconscious, resuscitated,
and evacuated to a chamber where he suffered massive
heart failure and died. The independent double cylinders
contained EAN 34 (34% O2, bal. N2)
with a maximum operating depth of about 33m/108 ft.
The diver, who was the only member of
the local Sheriff’s Volunteer Rescue Squad trained for
depths beyond 40m/130 ft, had slept only three hours
before receiving an early morning call requesting his
help in recovering a drowned swimmer’s body from the
92m/300 ft quarry. It was reported that he regularly
used the same sets of doubles for air, EAN, and trimix,
never labeled his cylinders, or used contents tags, and
did not own an analyzer. He instead relied on memory,
much to the consternation of his friends. The diver
apparently grabbed the doubles containing EAN instead of
air and arrived at the dive site.
It is believed that the diver
descended breathing from one of his stage bottles
containing EAN 23, and switched to his doubles
containing EAN 34 at depth (PO2=2.4 atm @
61m/200 ft). A second member of the recovery team was
breathing air. The two found the body approximately 30
minutes into the dive and tied it off at about 61m/200
ft. The rescue team signaled to surface. Just then the
partner reported hearing the diver moan and start
kicking hard for the surface. The partner tried to stop
the diver to no avail, and followed him up. The diver
was found face down with his regulator out of his mouth
at 52m/170 ft. His partner began to haul him up and
handed him off at about 34m/110 ft to support divers who
then got him to the surface. The diver regained
consciousness briefly as he was being evacuated to a
chamber, where he died of heart failure likely the
result of an embolism. Sadly, the use of content tags on
his cylinders would likely have prevented his death.
Damn.
August 1995
Oxtox Hit On The ‘Lusey’, Celtic Sea
by RW Bill Hamilton
In August, 1995, a diver who was
decompressing at the 6m/20 ft stop suffered an oxygen
convulsion and was rescued successfully on a dive on the
Lusitania by the Starfish Enterprise team.
As a technical diving operation, this
one appears to be exemplary, and this incident bears
that out. The group was correctly criticized for not
having an onboard chamber, but it should be pointed out
that their dives have something sorely lacking in most
other open sea technical operations: an organizational
structure and an operations plan.
Briefly, Starfish uses two standby
divers, one in the water and one on deck, and has a
second chase boat which tends to offset the use of a
small dive boat as the main platform. The divers take
their oxygen decompression while hanging on a semi-rigid
“station,” so all can drift as a unit. This minimizes
the problems of fighting current, and reduces the wind
chill factor. A chase boat makes drift decompression a
new ball game.
The divers used a profile generated
(“cut”) with MigPlan. The important issue here is the
actual profile, which shows the diver deeper than
87m/287 ft for 16 min (maximum depth 93m/307 ft) after a
three-minute descent. He made planned stops while
ascending to 6m/20 ft, switched to air at 51m/170 ft and
to EAN 50 at 21m/70 ft. After 14 minutes at 6m/20 ft, he
convulsed. His partner and another diver were not
successful in putting an air regulator into his mouth.
His head was tilted back, his eyes were closed, and
blood came out of his mouth. He still had a tight grip
on the john line. They tried to force gas out of his
chest but saw none escape, and took him to the surface.
He was given some meaningful
expired-air resuscitation while still partly in the
water, his BC and tanks were removed, and he was hoisted
on board. It took about two minutes to get the diver
onto the deck. A helicopter was called.
He looked dead and he did not appear
to be breathing. His mouth was open and his tongue
protruded about half an inch. His mask was full of
vomit, and some light pink fluid, not frothy, escaped
from his mouth. His neck seal was cut away, and
resuscitation was continued. Within moments he began to
breathe on his own. He was placed on a dry, warm, engine
hatch cover which had been cleared in advance for just
such an event. A constant flow oxygen mask with a good
seal was used at first while his breathing was weak;
however, as it became stronger, he was switched to a
demand mask set for slight positive pressure. He
recovered consciousness and was given a quick
neurological check, which showed no DCI abnormalities. A
support diver gathered up the records and his dive
computer. The helicopter picked him up 50 minutes after
he surfaced, and in another 15 minutes, he was at the
chamber, disoriented but with few other DCS symptoms. He
was given a Table 6 (RN 62) (aquaCORPS N5/BENT]
about an hour later; no oxygen toxicity symptoms were
noted. He was hospitalized for two days.
The diver does not remember anything
from the time he felt the convulsion coming on until the
arrival of the helicopter. He will not be allowed to
dive for three months, but no residual effects are
expected. From the point of view of non-commercial
diving operations, the rescue and resuscitation were
classical.
Several points are worth noting. There was some, but not
much warning of the impending seizure. It was impossible
to reinsert the mouthpiece; this is to be expected, and
further points up the value of a full-face mask.
There is always concern about
embolism when ascending a convulsing diver. This team
tried to expel air out of his lungs, a sensible move.
Although embolism from such ascents is relatively rare,
ascending is the better alternative if drowning is the
other. If the diver is able to breathe, then ascent
should be delayed until the diver is breathing
regularly.
Because there were standby divers to
take over, the dive partner went only part way to the
surface with the unconscious diver (because of his own
decompression obligation). To surface for a minute or
two after being several minutes at the 6m/20 ft stop on
oxygen is acceptable for lifesaving efforts and entails
very low extra risk as long as the obligated
decompression is completed. If more than two or three
minutes are spent at the surface, it would be advisable
to add some oxygen time, as a guess about three or four
times as much as the time spent at the surface, plus any
remaining obligation.
Constant-flow oxygen is normally not
ideal for surface treatment of DCI, where the patient
needs to receive 100% oxygen. A demand system is better.
In this case, constant flow was appropriate when the
diver was not breathing strongly. Having another diver
accompany a diver going for treatment is highly
recommended. Although it is desirable to make an
immediate switch to air or a lower-PO2
mixture, in the event of a convulsion, this need not be
done if it requires unusual effort or risk.At this
point, we have no clues as to why this diver convulsed.
He had made over 100 similar trimix dives so had been
exposed to substantial oxygen profiles before. He was
not taking medications, got sleep the night before, his
equipment seemed to be functioning normally, and he was
not exercising or doing anything else known to cause a
CO2 buildup. –The highest PO2
on the bottom was 1.24 bars, and on decompression was
1.56 for only 3 minutes; the diver was at 1.61 during
the oxygen breathing for 14 minutes, and had used about
50% of his allowable exposure (by at least two widely
used methods against the NOAA 1991 limits). He normally
takes his oxygen in cycles, but in this case had not
even used one cycle. He had no toxicity symptoms during
the Table 6 (RN 62) two hours later. At this time we
have no confident explanation. This shows the fickle
nature of CNS oxygen toxicity, and highlights the need
to have rescue capability. This incident further shows
the value of strong organization and support divers.
|
aquaCORPS #13 O2N2 INCIDENT REPORTS (1996)
October
1995
Catalina Island, California—A
diver suffered hypoxia and went unconscious in about 5
m/15 ft while diving a refurbished CCR-1000 rebreather
during a “Rebreather Experience,” and was pulled to the
surface by the safety diver and dive partner. She was
revived with no ill effects.
The cause of the incident was
attributed to battery failure on the unit, which left
the primary PO2 sensors and oxygen addition
value inoperative and resulted in no oxygen being fed to
the diver. In addition, the diver failed to properly
monitor the primary and backup PO2 displays
which would have alerted her to the problem. This would
have prompted her to manually add oxygen to the system
as per standard protocol and abort the dive.
According to personnel conducting the
dives, the batteries on the unit, which had been dived
twice earlier that day, were checked according to a
pre-dive checklist prior to the dive. There was some
discussion that the batteries had been tested without a
load and therefore gave an inaccurate reading.
Reportedly, the unit was turned on before the dive,
which would have delivered a load. Others also
questioned whether the canister was packed correctly,
and whether the antiquated units were reliable enough to
dive at all.
The diver, a physician’s assistant,
stated that she “analyzed” the oncoming hypoxia symptoms
(euphoria, confusion, incoherence) into unconsciousness.
The safety diver and partner realized that something was
wrong and pulled her out.
November 1995
Bahamas—A
27-year-old recreational and enriched air instructor
died while conducting a deep air dive with three other
divers to about 92 m/300 ft or more. He used a single
100 cf/12-liter cylinder with redundant regulators
(H-valve) and EAN 50 stage bottle. The body was never
recovered.
Reportedly, the diver, who was
working the charter, tagged along with a private
instructor and his two students who had completed a deep
air diving course the day before. They were making a
bounce dive to 92 m/300 ft on air along the wall using
recreational gear.
According to his employer, the diver
was not overly involved in technical diving but had
4000-5000 dives under his belt, including 1000 dives to
depths between 46- 61 m/150-200 ft and had dived several
times to 123 m/400 ft on air. Although the diver was
aware of the dangers involved, he “liked” deep air
diving.
The group with which the diver
descended along the wall was not using a decompression
line or support divers. The instructor reported that he
signaled his two students to ascend after about 4 four
to 5 minutes of bottom time. He then reported that he
noticed that the diver, who was at about 84 m/275 ft,
was heading up the wall at an angle, at which time the
instructor began his own ascent and lost track of the
diver. Another instructor who had trained the diver
challenges this report and believes that the diver may
have actually planned to make a deep plunge at that
point and never returned.
The instructor surfaced after about
29 minutes of run time. Several recovery dives were made
to no avail. This is reportedly the fourth
recreational diving death this year on the wall in the
Bahamas. One observer questioned the judgment of an
instructor who dives to 92 m/300 ft on single air
cylinders with students in tow.
November 1995
Oahu, Hawaii—A
fish collector suffered a spinal hit on a 61-92
m/200-300 ft air dive to collect fish after he got
separated from his down line (and his travel
decompression gas) when the boat broke loose. He was
forced to surface prematurely, swim 20 minutes to reach
the boat, and then complete his decompression.
The diver and his 19-year old
partner, who reportedly had no formal deep diving
training, left their boat unattended while they
descended to deeper than 61 m/200 ft to collect a
specific fish, which apparently could bring up to $3,000
for a matched pair. They reportedly attached their
travel gas (air stage) and oxygen to the anchor line.
The 19-year-old got so narked that he decided to remain
on the line while the fish collector swam to collect the
fish. The anchor pulled away, and the boat and
decompression gas drifted away.
When the collector surfaced because
of a gas shortage, the boat was a 20-minute swim away.
The collector got to the boat and breathed all the
remaining gas (including O2) in an attempt to
decompress. It is not known when the collector began to
experience DCI symptoms. The two drove several hours to
reach a chamber, crossing the Liki Liki Pass (1,500 feet
above sea level) in the process. When they arrived, the
collector was unable to climb out of the truck unaided
and had lost all feeling below his chest. After 15 days
of treatment, the diver improved to having feeling in
his waist. The prognosis is that he will never walk
again. Based on a report from Dennis Pierce/Epic
Dives. |
Additional Resources:
Diver Alert
Networks Annual Diving Reports on Diving Incidents,
Injuries and Fatalities (1988-2016)
can be found here.
Get a free copy of
aquaCORPS
#4 MIX, which was
published in 1992 as technical diving was just emerging.
The issue provides a window into what mixed gas diving
looked like in 1992. |
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