- Nuno Gomes (diver)
-
Nuno Gomes (born 1951) is a South African SCUBA diver (of Portuguese descent) who holds the official current (2011) world record deep dive (independently verified and approved by Guinness World Records (see the 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011 Guinness World Record books)). He used self contained underwater breathing apparatus (SCUBA) to dive to a depth of 1,044 feet (318.25 m). This depth excludes the rope stretch of 11.68 feet (3.56 m). The dive was done in the Red Sea (Dahab), off the coast of Egypt, in June 2005. Nuno's total dive time was 12 hours and 20 minutes, the descent took only 14 minutes. He is one of only two men verified by Guinness World Records to have dived on SCUBA equipment (using trimix) below 1,000 feet (the other diver being the late John Bennett), Pascal Bernabé claims to have dived to 1,083 feet (330 m), including a rope stretch of 32.81 feet (10 m), in July 2005. His dive was never approved by Guinness World Records.
Gomes is also a renowned cave diver and holds the official current (2011) Guinness World Record for the deepest cave dive, done in Boesmansgat cave (South Africa), to a depth of 927 feet (282.6 m), in 1996. The cave is located at an altitude of 5000 feet (1550 m) above sea level, which resulted in Nuno having to decompress for an equivalent sea level dive of 1112 feet (339 m) to prevent decompression sickness ("the bends"). The total dive time was 12 hours and 15 minutes, while the descent took 15 minutes.
See also
Sources
- Nuno Gomes - official site
- Sterling Divers - Nuno Gomes
- South African Nuno Gomes now world's deepest scuba diver
Categories:- Underwater divers
- 1951 births
- Living people
- South African sportspeople stubs
- Underwater diving stubs
- Water sports biography stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.