Tag Archives: under-the-water

Man and Woman Missing After Diving Into River, Saving Child

Emergency crews are searching for a man and woman who jumped into the Big Sioux River in South Dakota to try to save a six-year-old child. The boy is safe, but Sioux Falls authorities said on Friday that the effort to find the two adults is now considered a recovery and no longer a rescue mission. Man and Woman Save Child, Go Missing in River The man and woman jumped into the river near Sioux Falls around 6 p.m. Thursday after the young boy fell in, according to local NBC affiliate KDLT. The woman is related to the child but is not his mother. The man is not a relative of the boy, KDLT reported. “By the time I got there he was already in there and they had him by the arm,” Napoleon Ducheneaux, a friend of the man who dove in, told KDLT. “They had the kid in his arm and he slipped and fell. And then not too long after that, the kid popped up a little bit to the right and climbed up the rocks by himself.” The two adults found themselves in trouble. “I heard him and the woman talking. He said something like, ‘You hold on to me, I’ll hold on to you.’ And I kept telling them to come to my voice,” Ducheneaux said. The two then slipped under the water Sioux Falls Fire Rescue Chief Jim Sideras said, “We have some issues with very thick ice that we are trying to address. We also have a high flow of water because of ice melting. “We have a lot of foam. We have on the scene crews who are trained in swift water rescue and ice rescue. We also have on site a dive team.” “Because of the thickness of the ice, it’s not possible for that team to go in.” Sideras reported that the boy was safe with family members. “I was with him and he’s with family members, and he’s doing fine,” Sideras said.

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Man and Woman Missing After Diving Into River, Saving Child

Man and Woman Missing After Diving Into River, Saving Child

Emergency crews are searching for a man and woman who jumped into the Big Sioux River in South Dakota to try to save a six-year-old child. The boy is safe, but Sioux Falls authorities said on Friday that the effort to find the two adults is now considered a recovery and no longer a rescue mission. Man and Woman Save Child, Go Missing in River The man and woman jumped into the river near Sioux Falls around 6 p.m. Thursday after the young boy fell in, according to local NBC affiliate KDLT. The woman is related to the child but is not his mother. The man is not a relative of the boy, KDLT reported. “By the time I got there he was already in there and they had him by the arm,” Napoleon Ducheneaux, a friend of the man who dove in, told KDLT. “They had the kid in his arm and he slipped and fell. And then not too long after that, the kid popped up a little bit to the right and climbed up the rocks by himself.” The two adults found themselves in trouble. “I heard him and the woman talking. He said something like, ‘You hold on to me, I’ll hold on to you.’ And I kept telling them to come to my voice,” Ducheneaux said. The two then slipped under the water Sioux Falls Fire Rescue Chief Jim Sideras said, “We have some issues with very thick ice that we are trying to address. We also have a high flow of water because of ice melting. “We have a lot of foam. We have on the scene crews who are trained in swift water rescue and ice rescue. We also have on site a dive team.” “Because of the thickness of the ice, it’s not possible for that team to go in.” Sideras reported that the boy was safe with family members. “I was with him and he’s with family members, and he’s doing fine,” Sideras said.

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Man and Woman Missing After Diving Into River, Saving Child

James Cameron Dives To Deepest Point On Earth In Submarine

‘Avatar’ director became the first solo diver to dive to 35,756 feet in the Pacific Ocean. By Gil Kaufman James Cameron Photo: Getty Images Director James Cameron has scaled the heights in Hollywood with mega-smashes including “Titanic” and “Avatar.” 
 Hell, he even once described himself as “king of the world” at the Oscars. But on Sunday, the oceanographic nut reached new depths when he piloted his custom one-man submarine to the deepest point in the world’s oceans by hitting 35,756 feet in the Mariana Trench, southwest of Guam, according to National Geographic . It marks the first time a solo diver has ever reached that point. Following seven years of preparation for the dive, and a few days cooling his heels to wait for bad weather to pass, Cameron pulled the feat off at 2:52 p.m. PT and then shared the historic news on Twitter. “Just arrived at the ocean’s deepest pt. Hitting bottom never felt so good,” Cameron tweeted after the two-and-a-half-hour descent that took him 6.8 miles deep. “Can’t wait to share what I’m seeing w/ you @DeepChallenge.” The record earned props from none other than movie tough guy and former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who tweeted, “Congrats to my great friend on the deepest solo dive ever. Always a pioneer.” Cameron surfaced a short time later after a 70-minute ascent. Cameron helped design the torpedo-shaped sub called the DeepSea Challenger, which he used to collect samples and 3-D video on the ocean floor for nearly six hours. He was pleased with how the dive went, though he lamented that the “manipulator arm” didn’t work, which is “to be expected w/a prototype vehicle. Takes time to iron out bugs.” He said the team plans to go back and do a number of other dives over the next few weeks. “I see this as the beginning of opening up this frontier,” he said. “Open up to science & understanding these deep places.” Though he’s focused much of his time lately on the dive, it’s possible Cameron surfaced with some ideas for the “Avatar” sequel. In August of 2010, the director told us that the sequel could be focused on the oceans of Pandora. “I think what we should do there is — because we’ll have to have characters that are in and under the water — is that we should actually capture them underwater,” Cameron explained. “It’s not the same as going diving, but I like to keep my diving, which I do for pleasure, separate from work.”

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James Cameron Dives To Deepest Point On Earth In Submarine

Whitney Houston Cause of Death: Heart Attack, Cocaine

The Los Angeles County Coroner has released the official cause of death for Whitney Houston. According to the report, the singer passed away due to an “accidental drowning” that was related to heart disease and also the presence of cocaine in her system. An insider tells TMZ that it’s “very possible” the heart attack caused Whitney to pass out and fall under the water. It’s also likely this was triggered by the use of cocaine. It should be noted, however, that no cocaine was found in the hotel room where Houston passed away. Law enforcement officials have said from the beginning that no foul play was involved in the tragedy and nothing in this report suggests anything different. Perhaps now folks such as Nancy Grace can let Whitney rest in peace.

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Whitney Houston Cause of Death: Heart Attack, Cocaine

‘Avatar’ Sequels Planned For December 2014, ’15

Director James Cameron outlines his plan to shoot the sequels together. By Aly Semigran Zoe Saldana and Sam Worthington in “Avatar” Photo: 20th Century Fox On James Cameron’s watch, come 2014 and 2015, it will, in fact, be a blue, blue Christmas. The writer/producer/director, who was at the helm of 2009’s Oscar-winning, box-office-record-breaking “Avatar,” told Entertainment Weekly that fans of the big-screen digital breakthrough should expect its subsequent sequels within the next three to four years. “I am in the process of writing the next two ‘Avatar’ films now,” Cameron said. “We are planning to shoot them together and post them together, and we will probably release them not quite back to back, but about a year apart.” Cameron said that the “current plan” is for the follow-ups to hit theaters by “Christmas ’14 and ’15.” While the first “Avatar” took more than four years from inception to screen, Cameron told MTV News back in December 2009, “My next goal is to refine the technique, make it easier so it doesn’t take as long.” “From the time we capture and finish the capture, it’s literally nine to 10 months to get the CG characters working, to get their facial musculature working. … So now we have Jake, we have Neytiri. Sam can step right back into it, the characters will fit them like a glove, and we’ll just go on. So a lot of the start-up torque that had to be done for one movie really makes more sense if you play it out across several films,” Cameron explained. While the 56-year-old did not divulge on too many plot details for the “Avatar” sequels, he did confirm to EW that characters such as Neytiri (Zoe Saldana) and Jake Sully (Sam Worthington), should be expected to make a return. “Basically, if you survived the first film, you get to be in the second film, at least in some form,” Cameron said. After hinting that the sequels would take place in Pandora’s ocean, Cameron spoke to MTV News last year about how he would make the new environment come to life. “I think what we should do there is — because we’ll have to have characters that are in and under the water — is that we should actually capture them underwater,” the “Titanic” director said. And while Cameron’s storyline may change from the first to the second and third films, it seems his purpose behind the project has stayed steadfast. “Fox has partnered with me to donate a chunk of the profits to environmental causes that are at the heart of the ‘Avatar’ world,” he told EW. “I didn’t want to make more ‘Avatar’ movies without a grander plan in place.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Avatar’ Sequels Planned For December 2014, ’15

Slimehead Anyone? 10 Fish Fished More After a Name Change (Slideshow)

Photo via FreeCat @ Flickr Sometimes a name change can be a good thing (just ask Walter Willison, Jennifer Anastassakis, or Caryn Johnson, who you know as Bruce Willis, Jennifer Aniston , and Whoopi Goldberg). But for these fish, a new name meant new popularity — and an increased danger of being overfished. Would slimeheads, mudbugs, hogs, and whore’s eggs stayed peacefully abundant under the water if they hadn’t had their identities stolen? Click on to see other weirdly-nam… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Slimehead Anyone? 10 Fish Fished More After a Name Change (Slideshow)

Sea Shepherd Deploys Acoustical Warning System for Whales in the Faeroe Islands

Over the last few weeks, Sea Shepherd Conservation Society has maintained a presence in the Danish Protectorate of the Faeroe Islands. Sea Shepherd is partnered with the Brigitte Bardot Foundation in our opposition to the brutal and barbaric slaughter of pilot whales by Faeroese citizens. It is a slaughter more horrific than the killing of the dolphins in Taiji, Japan, and it is taking place in Europe in violation of the Berne Convention, to which Denmark is a signatory. From our ship the Golfo Azzurro, Sea Shepherd and the Brigitte Bardot Foundation have been gathering evidence on the slaughter of the whales and deploying experimental acoustical devices in the water to ward migrating pilot whales away from the island. We have kept this idea quiet until now, but today the Faeroese media reported that a pod of pilot whales had escaped because of sounds being broadcasted under the water. Well, they caught us. We have been doing just that, and it appears that the devices work, and if they work we will be returning next year with more of them to deploy. The Faeroese slaughter entire pods, including pregnant females and young calves. Not a single whale survives once the Faeroese pull out their long knives and clubs. They perish in an agonizing bloody orgy as drunken fishermen hack, stab, club, and slash the defenseless animals to death, filling the bay with blood. The Faeroese call it “The Grind” and say it is a tradition and a gift from God. We call it a sadistic blood sport and a crime, a violation of the rules of the European Community, of which the Faeroes receives full benefits. The acoustical devices can be left in the sea and will operate for weeks on batteries. They may be the key to saving the lives of many of these gentle whales, deterring them away from the violently cruel reception that the Faeroese would otherwise give them. added by: jefftego

James Cameron Wants To Capture ‘Avatar’ Sequel Underwater

Director is eager to film in the deep, though it won’t be the same as the diving he does for pleasure. By Kara Warner “Avatar” Photo: 20th Century Fox The history-making success of James Cameron’s “Avatar” has not only quashed pre-release grumblings about the production’s bloated budget, but turned the conversation toward the two confirmed sequels that don’t exactly sound like low-budget affairs either. With the mega-blockbuster’s re-release approaching, details about the next two films have started to trickle out via the maestro himself, specifically Cameron’s hints that the second film will involve the oceans of Pandora . Given his water-related filmmaking experience (see “Titanic” and “The Abyss”), as well as his fondness for diving as a hobby, MTV News recently asked Cameron if he’ll shoot sequences underwater. “I think what we should do there is — because we’ll have to have characters that are in and under the water — is that we should actually capture them underwater,” Cameron explained. “It’s not the same as going diving, but I like to keep my diving, which I do for pleasure, separate from work.” He added that diving for work is not as much fun. “Diving for shooting a movie is work,” he said. “Diving for exploration is a gas. I like to keep my peas and carrots separate.” Cameron previously described the ocean on Pandora as “equally rich and diverse and crazy and imaginative” as the setting of the first film, but that “it just won’t be a rain forest.” Regarding the re-release of the film and the extra nine minutes that will be added, the Oscar-winner said he’ll also be adding footage to the film’s eventual special edition DVD. “We’re doing a longer version for the DVD that is 16 to 17 minutes longer,” he said, “but you’ll have the choice: You can watch [the nine-minutes-longer version] or you can watch the original if you want to.” Are you excited about the sequels and seeing the oceans of Pandora? Talk about it in the comments! Check out everything we’ve got on “Avatar.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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James Cameron Wants To Capture ‘Avatar’ Sequel Underwater

Is Toxic Corexit Killing Crops In Mississippi?

Kurt Nimmo at infowars. June 25, 2010. “Yobie Benjamin writing for The San Francisco Chronicle, is reporting what nobody else in the corporate media is reporting — a mysterious disease has stricken crops in Mississippi and it may be connected to the BP oil gusher. “It seems like damage brought by the oil gusher has spread way beyond the ocean, coastal areas and beaches. Collateral damage now appears to include agricultural damage way inland Mississippi,” writes Benjamin. The disease has caused widespread damage to plants from weeds to farmed organic and conventionally grown crops. Benjamin believes the disease is the result of BP spraying the oil dispersant Corexit 9500 in the Gulf of Mexico. Corexit 9500 is believed to be responsible for widespread reports of oil cleanup crews reporting various injuries including respiratory distress, dizziness and headaches. “Dispersants have never been applied on this scale, leaving environmental scientists guessing about the consequences. Corexit may have caused seven cleanup workers to be admitted to the hospital with shortness of breath and nausea,” reports Popular Science. “Many have focused their concerns about Corexit… on what it’s doing under the water. But as we know, the oceans are part of a larger precipitation cycle, and scientists are worried that soon the consequences of using dispersants could be falling from the sky,” writes Beth Buczynski for Care2, an environmental website. The EPA asked BP to stop using Corexit, which is banned in 18 countries due to its toxicity, but the oil transnational has refused.” added by: futuregen