Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Mensun Bound

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British maritime archaeologist

Mensun Bound
Born (1953-02-04)4 February 1953 (age 72)
Academic background
Alma materFairleigh Dickinson University
Rutgers University
Academic work
DisciplineUnderwater archaeology
InstitutionsOxford University

Mensun Bound (born 4 February 1953) is a Britishmaritime archaeologist born in Stanley,Falkland Islands. He is best known as director of exploration for two expeditions to theWeddell Sea which led to the rediscovery of theEndurance,[1] in which SirErnest Shackleton and a crew of 27 men sailed for theAntarctic on the 1914–1917Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. The ship sank after being crushed by the ice on 21 November 1915. It was rediscovered by theEndurance22 expedition on 5 March 2022.[1]

He is also known for directing the excavation of an Etruscan 6th-century BC shipwreck offGiglio Island, Italy,[2] the oldest known shipwreck of the Archaic era, and theHoi An Cargo which revolutionized the understanding of Ming-Vietnamese porcelain from Vietnam's art-historical Golden Age.[3][4]

In 2014–15, Bound led a search for theImperial GermanEast Asia Squadron, sunk during theBattle of the Falkland Islands in 1914, and since then inAUV andROV surveys in depths up to 6,000 m. He eventually located the squadron's flagship,SMS Scharnhorst, in April 2019, 105 years after her sinking.[5]

Discovery Channel has called Bound "the Indiana Jones of the Deep".[4]

Early life and education

[edit]

Bound was born on 4 February 1953 inStanley, Falkland Islands. He is a fifth-generation Islander whose great-great-grandfather, James Biggs, arrived with the first colonists to Port Louis on the brigHebe in January 1842. His great-grandfather, William Biggs, was the first to raise the Union Jack when the settlement was moved to Jackson's Harbour (now Port Stanley) in 1843–44.[6][7] Bound's early education was in the Falkland Islands and Montevideo, Uruguay. After secondary school, he worked at sea on the steam shipDarwin. In 1972, he received a scholarship from the Leopold Schepp Foundation to attendFairleigh Dickinson University inNew Jersey, from where he graduatedsumma cum laude in ancient history. Whilst undertaking a further degree in Classical art and archaeology atRutgers University, also in New Jersey, he was a research assistant in Greek pottery at theMetropolitan Museum of Art, New York. In 1976 he was awarded a Commonwealth scholarship toLincoln College, Oxford University, to study classical archaeology. In 1985, he was given a Junior Research Fellowship atSt Catherine's College, Oxford University. At the same time, under the Chairmanship ofAlan Bullock, he was appointed Director of Oxford University MARE,[3] the first academic maritime archaeological unit in England. In 1994, he became the Triton Fellow in Maritime Archaeology atSt. Peter's College, Oxford. He retired from academic life in 2013 to pursue his interest in deep-ocean archaeology.

Early archaeological experience

[edit]

Bound's student experience as an archaeologist was on land, where he worked on Roman villa sites outside Rome[8] and various sites in the English Midlands. Bound's underwater archaeological career began in 1979 when he worked forGeorge Bass of theInstitute of Nautical Archaeology in Texas on sites off the coast of Turkey. This was followed by theMadrague de Giens shipwreck off the South of France and theMary Rose in England.[9]

Principal excavations and surveys

[edit]
  • The Giglio wreck. 1981–86.Island of Giglio. Greek or Etruscan wreck from 600 BC at 50 m in Campese Bay, Island of Giglio, discovered in the early 1960s by British diver Reg Vallintine. Between 1982 and 1986, the wreck, Greek or Etruscan, was excavated by an Oxford University team led by Bound.[10]
    Fine wares from the site consisted mainly of Corinthian, Laconian, Ionian and Etruscan fabrics representing a range of shapes.  Some were painted with human figures, animals, florals and mythological motifs.  The storage jars (amphorae) were of Etruscan, Samian, East Greek and Punic-Phoenician origin; some contained pitch, olives and olive oil.  Other finds included amber, lamps, arrowheads, parts of helmets, copper nuggets, iron bars, gaming, bones, musical pipes,[11] a wooden writing plaque, callipers, lead and copper ingots.[12]   Surviving ship's timber displayed 'sewn' joinery techniques.
    The entire top floor of the national underwater museum at Porto Santo Stefano is dedicated to the finds from the Giglio ship. The material occupies the entire top floor of the National Underwater Archaeological Museum atPorto Santo Stefano[13]
  • Hoi An, Vietnam. 1997–99. TheHội An wreck was a mid-15th century junk that was lost in the South China Sea, 22 kilometres to the west of the Da Nang headland, with a cargo of Vietnamese porcelain that had been made at Cu Dao on the Red River Delta.  The Hoi An excavation, licensed by Vietnam's Minister of Culture, was "the deepest, full-scale archaeological excavation ever attempted" (70 to 80 m) and one of the few occasions thatsaturation diving techniques have been used to excavate a wreck.[3][14][15] Involving three large vessels, three deep-ocean tugs, two gun-boats for protection and over 150 people, the excavation took four years and cost US$14 million.
    Diving was a 24-hour operation working at a maximum dive-table depth of 82 metres. Saturation diving techniques were employed in which divers lived in pressurised modules on the deck and were transported to and from the site in a dive-bell.[3] Following the excavation, looting of the site resumed.
    Six different Vietnamese museums have major collections from the wreck on permanent display; the main finds on display in the National Museum,Hanoi.
  • German 'pocket' battleshipAdmiral Graf Spee, River Plate. 1997. Bound conducted the first archaeological survey of theAdmiral Graf Spee which was scuttled[16] not far from Montevideo following the Battle of the River Plate in December 1939. In 2004, a salvage operation was launched "with German funding and Uruguayan government backing".[17] The wreck was found by dragging an anchor through the water. A sidescan survey showed that the wreck was upright but heeled to starboard and that she was in two parts, the separation occurring where the after turret had exploded during scuttling operations.
    Following the survey, Bound was given permission by the Uruguayan Navy and Ministry of Culture to recover one of the 5.9-inch guns which is now on display outside the maritime museum in Montevideo.
    In later years, Bound was part of the small team (with Etchegaray, Bado and Sergio Pronczuk)[18] that raised the range-finder[19] (now on display beside the port gates of Montevideo) and the bronze eagle from the ship's stern.[20] Because of the Nazi symbol held within its talons, the eagle's recovery was controversial and after being displayed at a Montevideo hotel for two months, the eagle was moved to storage in a sealed crate in a navy warehouse; a Uruguayan court has now ordered that the eagle must be sold at auction.[21]
  • HMSAgamemnon. Maldonado Bay, Uruguay. 1993. 1997–98. In 1997 Bound led a survey of the third rate ship of the line, HMSAgamemnon (built 1781).  This wasLord Nelson's first major command, the ship upon which he first fought the French and which, in 1805, was part of his column atBattle of Trafalgar. It was also the ship upon which he first met Lady Hamilton.  In 1809, the ship was lost in Maldonado Bay near the mouth of the River Plate.  The main result of the survey was the discovery of a cannon[22] which, because of the number on its breach, was confirmed by the Woolwich Arsenal to be the only cannon in existence that can be proven to have been fired in the Battle of Trafalgar.[23] The cannon was conserved in the Uruguayan Navy Yard and is now on display in theNaval museum of Montevideo, Uruguay. Other artefacts on display at the Museum ofBuckler's Hard where the ship was built.
  • Mahdia Shipwreck, Tunisia. 1993 and 1996. Discovered by Greek sponge divers in 1907. Survey co-directed with Fethi Chelbi of the Inst. Nat. de Patrimoine of Tunisia.[24] 1st century BC Roman wreck with a "huge quantity of antiquities", including seventy Attic marble columns, seven life-sized marble heads and busts, and many bronze sculptures, including a statue of a winged youth and a herm of Dionysus.[25] Early finds on display at theBardo Museum, Tunis.
  • Survey of Punic port, Marsala, Sicily. 1982–83. Co-directed with Professor Giocchino Falsone ofPalermo University. Finds consisted mainly of amphorae of Punic and Roman origin, now on display or in storage at the Antiquario,Marsala, along with items of fineware and statuary.[9]
  • Survey of reported wreck off the island ofGiannutri, Tuscany. 1983. The 'wreck' was found to be an anchorage where sheltering ships discarded their refuse. Amphora and broken tableware of Roman origin covering some 300 years. Material in storage with the Superintendency of Archaeology for Tuscany.
  • Survey of Roman wreck in 60m off Punta Fenaio,Island of Giglio. 1983. Ship containedTubi Fitilli and amphorae of North African origin. Material in storage with the Superintendency of Archaeology for Tuscany.
  • Survey of deep-water 6th-century Etruscan wreck off GalbucinaIsland of Giglio. 1983. Etruscan and Punic amphorae. Material in storage with the Superintendency of Archaeology for Tuscany.
  • Falkland Islands. 1983–84. Survey of hulked 19th- and 20th-century sailing ships.
  • Roman wreck. Punto Diavolo,Island of Montecristo. 1985–87. Dispersed wreck at 60–75m containing type Pelichét 47 Roma amphorae. Material in storage with the Superintendency of Archaeology for Tuscany.
  • Punta Gabiannara,Island of Giglio. 1986. Survey and recovery of Roman wreck remains. Material in storage at Superintendency of Archaeology for Tuscany.
  • Datillo wreck, Island ofPanarea,Lipari Archipelago,Aeolian Islands. 1986–89. 4th-century BC. Black-glaze fineware (lamps, plates, dishes, bowl, cups) located in a submerged live volcano.[26] Material on exhibition in the Museum of Lipari.
  • Survey of 1st-century AD Roman wreck beside the Formiche Rocks, island of Panarea,Aeolian Islands. 1987. Redware and Roman amphorae. Material in storage at the Museum of Lipari.
  • Zakynthos, Greece. 1990–92. Co-directed with Katerina Dellaporta. Survey and excavation of wreck from Venetian period. A part of the cargo was hazelnuts. Material in storage at theEphorate of Underwater Antiquities of Greece.
  • Island of Gorgona, Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy. 1990–92. Survey of Byzantine-period wreck off Italian prison island.
  • HMSEndymion,Turks and Caicos Islands. 1992. Survey of wreck for National Museum of Turks and Caicos.
  • Gibraltar. 1992–93. 1995. Survey of cannon site in front of port. Conducted for the Museum of Gibraltar.
  • Rhyl, Wales. 1992–93. Survey of hulked 19th-century sailing ships.
  • Salvador.River Plate, Uruguay. Early 19th-century ammunition ship. Work ceased when site was found to contain a large quantity of human remains. Was in collaboration with the Uruguay Government's Department of Patrimony.
  • Bound Skerry, Shetland Islands 1993–94. Co-directed with Tim Sharpe. Danish warshipWrangels Palais, lost 1687. Material in storage atShetland Museum.
  • Alderney Elizabethan wreck. 1993–2013. Co-directed with Mike Bowyer. Elizabethan wreck carrying cargo of munitions from the wars in France.[4] Three cannons recovered and variety of Tudor weaponry, pottery and Tudor remains.[27] Cannon, swords, muskets, powder flasks, armour: on display or in storage at theAlderney Museum.
  • HulkedCape Horn sailing ships aroundFalklands,South Georgia andPatagonia. 1994. General survey. In particular theJhelum,Charles Cooper andLady Elizabeth inPort Stanley and theVicar of Bray at Goose Green.
  • Straits of Malacca. 1995. In 1993, while searching for an English vessel, Bound discovered four shipwrecks from theBattle of Cape Rachado, fought between theDutch andPortuguese fleets in 1606. In 1995, he was contracted by theNational Museum of Malaysia to conduct an excavation.[28] Weaponry, pottery, silver 8 real coinage. All material in storage or on display in the National Museum of Malaysia.
  • Cape Verde Islands 1998–2001. Co-advisor withMargaret Rule on survey of three wreck sites around the archipelago.
  • Fort San Sebastian wreck, island of Mozambique, East Africa. 2001–03. Blue and white Ming porcelain, trade beads and gold. Under license and in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture, Maputo,
  • Southern Oceans. Led a five-month search in depths of up to 300 meters in the Southern Ocean forGraf von Spee's lost fleet from 1914. In December 2019, it was announced he had located the wreck ofSMS Scharnhorst.[5]
  • Weddell Sea Expedition 2019. Director of exploration. The main task of the expedition was the study of the Larsen C Ice Shelf and second attempting to find Ernest Shackleton's ship,Endurance, which sank under the ice in 1915. Although they succeeded in cutting through the pack to the point where the Endurance sank, the hunt had to be abandoned when the autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) conducting the seabed search failed to arrive at a programmed rendezvous point with the ship.[29]
  • Weddell Sea,Antarctica, 2022. Director of exploration forEndurance22 expedition based aboardS. A. Agulhas II, searching for the wreck of theEndurance, flagship of Sir Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. The expedition discovered the ship in "remarkable condition" on 5 March 2022.[30]

Publications

[edit]

Bound has authored or edited over 100 articles and several books on archaeology. In October 2022, Bound's account of the two expeditions to the Weddell Sea which led to the rediscovery of Shackleton'sEndurance was published under the titleThe Ship Beneath the Ice by Pan Macmillan.[31] A five-star review of the book by Simon Griffith of The Mail on Sunday[32] said the "narrative cracks along with the pace of a well-crafted thriller" while Robert Crampton in The Times called it "gratifyingly long on logistical detail, correspondingly short on flights of fancy".[33] In 2024, Simon & Schuster publishedWonders in the Deep, a history of the world told through shipwrecks and the artefacts found on them, co-authored by Bound and travel writer Mark Frary.[34] Bound's other books includeExcavating Ships of War (ed.),[35] Lost Ships (Simon & Schuster),[36]The Archaeology of Ships of War,[37]Archeologia Sottomarina alle Isole Eolie,[38] (Pungitopo) andA Ship Cast Away about Alderney with Jason Monaghan.[39]Books about Bound's work include Dragon Sea by F. Pope (Penguin Books)[3] on the South China Sea excavation; Tarquin's Ship (Souvenir Press) by A McKee,[40] on the Giglio ship excavation.Also, children's book The Search for the Oldest Shipwrecks in the World by D. Thornton tells the story of the Giglio ship.[41]

Other activities and awards

[edit]

Bound is a trustee of the Falkland Islands Foundation, the World Ship Trust, the Council of the Nautical Archaeology Society, the Alderney Maritime Trust, the Friends of the Falklands Museum and the Falkland Islands Maritime Heritage Trust.

He has organised four international conferences on maritime archaeology (two-day conference at the National Maritime Museum on 'The Archaeology of Ships of War';[37] two day conference on 'Fresh Water Archaeology', Univ. of Bangor; 'Maritime Archaeology in Italy', Inst. Archaeology, London; 'Metals from the Sea', Oxford). He is a Fellow of the Explorers Club, New York.

He has lectured widely on maritime archaeology for theBritish Council, and a range of museums, universities, learned societies, archaeological organisations and cruise ships. Has edited a book series, held Visiting Fellowships (University of North Wales), conducted coursework and been a doctoral examiner. His awards include 'Diver of the Year, Italy' 1985, and in 1992 he received the Colin McLeod medallion from the British Sub Aqua Club for 'Furthering international co-operation in diving'.[42]

Documentaries

[edit]

Bound's work has been the focus of many documentaries in England, Italy and the US, including an award-winning, four-part series entitledLost Ships by theDiscovery Channel, which covered theAgamemnon, the Hoi An wreck, theGraf Spee and the Mahdia ship. TheBBC has made several documentaries on Bound's work includingQueen Elizabeth's Lost Guns, about the recovery, replication and test-firing of an Elizabethan iron cannon from the Alderney wreck.[27]Lost Ships - The Hunt for the Kaiser's Superfleet, produced by TVT Productions for Smithsonian Channel, covers Bound's search for the lost fleet from theBattle of the Falkland Islands in 1914.[43]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abBBC News, 9.3.22
  2. ^"Mensun Bound - Etruscan Shipwreck & Flute Presentation - Isola del Giglio".YouTube. 30 June 2018.
  3. ^abcdePope, Frank (2007).Dragon Sea. Penguin.ISBN 9780718150013.
  4. ^abc"Meet the Excavation Director".BBC.com. BBC. Retrieved28 March 2020.
  5. ^ab"German WWI wreck Scharnhorst discovered off Falklands".BBC News. 5 December 2019. Retrieved5 December 2019.
  6. ^Strange, Ian J (26 January 1984).The Falkland Islands. David & Charles.ISBN 978-0715385319.
  7. ^Biggs, James (1 June 2008).The Dictionary of Falklands Biography. David Tatham.ISBN 978-0955898501.
  8. ^"The Via Gabina Villas". Rice University. Retrieved4 April 2020.
  9. ^abDingemans, Timothy G."Oxford's Nautical Archaeology Team: The First Ten Years of MARE". No. Spring 1991. Sea History. pp. 22–24. Retrieved29 March 2020.
  10. ^Bound, M.; Vallintine, R. (1983). "A wreck of possible Etruscan origin off Giglio Island".International Journal of Nautical Archaeology.12 (2):113–122.Bibcode:1983IJNAr..12..113B.doi:10.1111/j.1095-9270.1983.tb00120.x.ISSN 1095-9270.
  11. ^"Mensun Bound - Etruscan Shipwreck & Flute Presentation - Isola del Giglio".YouTube. 30 June 2018.
  12. ^Nardò, Livio."Il commercio etrusco arcaico nel Tirreno Settentrionale: l'evidenza archeologica dei relitti navali, dall'Isola del Giglio alla Francia Meridionale".{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
  13. ^"Permanent Exhibitions of the Spanish Fortress: Submerged Memories and Shipwrights".Musei di Maremma. Retrieved29 March 2020.
  14. ^Bound, Mensun (2001). "Aspects of the Hoi An Wreck: Dishes, bottles, Statuettes and Chronology".Taoci, Revue Annuelle de la Société Française d'Étude de la Céramique Orientale, Paris:95–103.
  15. ^Fay, Kim."Hoi An Hoard, Part One - The Excavation".Things Asian. Retrieved28 March 2020.
  16. ^"The end of the Graf Spee".The Guardian. Retrieved4 April 2020.
  17. ^Rocha, Jan (23 January 2004)."Salvage team in three-year plan to raise the Graf Spee".The Guardian. Retrieved4 April 2020.
  18. ^"Nazi symbol recovered from WW2 warship". Divernet. Retrieved4 April 2020.
  19. ^"Graf Spee rangefinder recovered".Mercopress. Retrieved28 March 2020.
  20. ^"German Battleship Last Broadside Shipwreck - Mensun Bound".YouTube. 3 July 2018.Archived from the original on 19 December 2021.
  21. ^"Uruguay court orders government to sell Nazi bronze eagle from battleship".The Guardian. Associated Press. 21 June 2019. Retrieved4 April 2020.
  22. ^"Ghost of Trafalgar Shipwreck with Mensun Bound".YouTube. 3 July 2018.Archived from the original on 19 December 2021.
  23. ^"Mítico cañón en Punta del Este".El Pais. 15 September 2017. Retrieved4 April 2020.
  24. ^"Galley of the Gods Shipwreck - with Mensun Bound".YouTube. 3 July 2018.Archived from the original on 19 December 2021.
  25. ^"The Oxford Roman Economy Project: Mahdia".The Oxford Roman Economy Project. Retrieved4 April 2020.
  26. ^Bound, Mensun (1989). "The Dattilo wreck (Panarea, Aeolian Islands): first season report".International Journal of Nautical Archaeology.18 (3):203–219.Bibcode:1989IJNAr..18..203B.doi:10.1111/j.1095-9270.1989.tb00197.x.ISSN 1095-9270.
  27. ^ab"BBC Two - Timewatch, 2008-2009, Queen Elizabeth's Lost Guns".BBC.
  28. ^Knight, Sam (4 November 2024)."The Shipwreck Detective".The New Yorker. Archived fromthe original on 6 November 2024. Retrieved29 November 2024.
  29. ^Amos, Jonathan (14 February 2019)."Search for Shackleton's lost Endurance ship called off". BBC. Retrieved2 April 2020.
  30. ^Amos, Jonathan (9 March 2022)."Endurance: Shackleton's lost ship is found in Antarctic".BBC News.Archived from the original on 9 March 2022. Retrieved9 March 2022.
  31. ^Bound, Mensun (2022).Ship beneath the ice : the discovery of Shackleton's Endurance. London.ISBN 978-1-0350-0841-4.OCLC 1346306111.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  32. ^Griffith, Simon (13 November 2022). "An epic feat of Endurance under the ice".The Mail on Sunday.
  33. ^Crampton, Robert (22 October 2022)."The Times". Retrieved13 November 2022.
  34. ^Bound, Mensun; Frary, Mark (26 September 2024).Wonders in the Deep. Simon & Schuster.ISBN 978-1398507401.
  35. ^"Excavating Ships of War [International Maritime Archaeology series no.2] by Bound, Mensun [editor]: (1998) | McLaren Books Ltd., ABA(associate), PBFA".www.abebooks.co.uk.
  36. ^"9780684852515: Lost Ships - AbeBooks - Bound, Mensun: 0684852519".www.abebooks.co.uk.
  37. ^ab"9780904614527: Archaeology of Ships of War: International Conference : Selected Papers (International Maritime Archaeology S.) - AbeBooks: 0904614522".www.abebooks.co.uk.
  38. ^Bound, Mensun (August 1992).Archeologia sottomarina alle isole Eolie - Mensun Bound - 2 reviews - Pungitopo - Other - Italiano - Anobii. Pungitopo.ISBN 9788885328396.
  39. ^Bound, Mensun (1 October 2001).A Ship Cast Away about Alderney. Alderney.ISBN 978-0954159504.
  40. ^McKee, Alexander (24 October 1985).Tarquin's Ship. Souvenir Books.ISBN 978-0285626522.
  41. ^Thornton, David (1 December 1987).The Search for the Oldest Shipwrecks in the World. D.& J.Thornton.ISBN 978-0907339281.
  42. ^"Colin McLeod Jubilee Trust Award".British Sub Aqua Club. Retrieved28 March 2020.
  43. ^Lost Ships: The Hunt for the Kaiser's Superfleet (Television production). TVT Productions..

External links

[edit]
Basic equipment
Breathing gas
Buoyancy and
trim equipment
Decompression
equipment
Diving suit
Helmets
and masks
Instrumentation
Mobility
equipment
Safety
equipment
Underwater
breathing
apparatus
Open-circuit
scuba
Diving rebreathers
Surface-supplied
diving equipment
Diving
equipment
manufacturers
Access equipment
Breathing gas
handling
Decompression
equipment
Platforms
Underwater
habitat
Remotely operated
underwater vehicles
Safety equipment
General
Activities
Competitions
Equipment
Freedivers
Hazards
Historical
Organisations
Occupations
Military
diving
Military
diving
units
Underwater
work
Salvage diving
Diving
contractors
Tools and
equipment
Underwater
weapons
Underwater
firearm
Specialties
Diver
organisations
Diving tourism
industry
Diving events
and festivals
Diving
hazards
Consequences
Diving
procedures
Risk
management
Diving team
Equipment
safety
Occupational
safety and
health
Diving
disorders
Pressure
related
Oxygen
Inert gases
Carbon dioxide
Breathing gas
contaminants
Immersion
related
Treatment
Personnel
Screening
Research
Researchers in
diving physiology
and medicine
Diving medical
research
organisations
Law
Archeological
sites
Underwater art
and artists
Engineers
and inventors
Historical
equipment
Diver
propulsion
vehicles
Military and
covert operations
Scientific projects
Awards and events
Incidents
Dive boat incidents
Diver rescues
Early diving
Freediving fatalities
Offshore
diving
incidents
Professional
diving
fatalities
Scuba diving
fatalities
Publications
Manuals
Standards and
Codes of Practice
General non-fiction
Research
Dive guides
Training and registration
Diver
training
Skills
Recreational
scuba
certification
levels
Core diving skills
Leadership skills
Specialist skills
Diver training
certification
and registration
organisations
Commercial diver
certification
authorities
Commercial diving
schools
Free-diving
certification
agencies
Recreational
scuba
certification
agencies
Scientific diver
certification
authorities
Technical diver
certification
agencies
Cave
diving
Military diver
training centres
Military diver
training courses
Surface snorkeling
Snorkeling/breath-hold
Breath-hold
Open Circuit Scuba
Rebreather
Sports governing
organisations
and federations
Competitions
Pioneers
of diving
Underwater
scientists
archaeologists and
environmentalists
Scuba record
holders
Underwater
filmmakers
and presenters
Underwater
photographers
Underwater
explorers
Aquanauts
Writers and journalists
Rescuers
Frogmen
Commercial salvors
Diving
physics
Diving
physiology
Decompression
theory
Diving
environments
Classification
Impact
Other
Deep-submergence
vehicle
Submarine rescue
Deep-submergence
rescue vehicle
Submarine escape
Escape set
Special
interest
groups
Neutral buoyancy
facilities for
Astronaut training
Other
International
National
People
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mensun_Bound&oldid=1311704650"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp