Timeline of diving technology

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The timeline of underwater diving technology is a chronological list of notable events in the history of the development of underwater diving equipment. With the partial exception of breath-hold diving, the development of underwater diving capacity, scope, and popularity, has been closely linked to available technology, and the physiological constraints of the underwater environment.

Primary constraints are

  • the provision of breathing gas to allow endurance beyond the limits of a single breath,
  • safely decompressing from high underwater pressure to surface pressure,
  • the ability to see clearly enough to effectively perform the task,
  • and sufficient mobility to get to and from the workplace.

Pre-industrial

  • Ancient Roman and Greek era.: There have been many instances of men swimming or diving for combat, but they always had to hold their breath, and had no diving equipment, except sometimes a hollow plant stem used as a snorkel.[1]
  • About 500 BC: (Information originally from
    Cape Artemisium.[2][3][4][5][6][7]
  • The use of diving bells was recorded by the Greek philosopher Aristotle in the 4th century BC: "...they enable the divers to respire equally well by letting down a cauldron, for this does not fill with water, but retains the air, for it is forced straight down into the water."[8]
  • 1300 or earlier: Persian divers were using diving
    tortoiseshell.[6]
  • 15th century: Konrad Kyeser, illustrated his manual of military technology Bellifortis with a diving suit fitted with a hose to the surface. This diving suit drawing can also be seen in the manuscript Ms.Thott.290.2º, written by Hans Talhoffer, which reproduces sections of Bellifortis.[9]
  • 15th century: Leonardo da Vinci made the first known mention of air tanks in Italy: he wrote in his Atlantic Codex (Biblioteca Ambrosiana, Milan) that systems were used at that time to artificially breathe under water, but he did not explain them in detail. Some drawings, however, showed different kinds of snorkels and an air tank (to be carried on the breast) that presumably should have no external connections. Other drawings showed a complete immersion kit, with a plunger suit which included a sort of mask with a box for air. The project was so detailed that it included a urine collector.[10][clarification needed]
  • 1535:
    Guglielmo de Lorena and Francesco de Marchi dived on a Roman vessel sunk in Lake Nemi using a one-man diving bell invented by de Lorena.[11]
  • 1602: Jerónimo de Ayanz y Beaumont built an air-renovated diving suit that allowed a man to remain underwater in the Pisuerga river on August 2. The diver passed an hour underwater before being ordered to return by King Philip III.[12]
  • 1616: Franz Kessler built an improved diving bell.[13]
  • Around 1620: Cornelis Drebbel may have made a crude rebreather.[13]
  • 1650: Otto von Guericke built the first air pump.[13]
  • 1715:

Industrial era

Start of modern diving

  • 1772: the first diving dress using a compressed-air reservoir was successfully designed and built in 1772 by Sieur[16] Fréminet, a Frenchman from Paris. Fréminet conceived an autonomous breathing machine equipped with a helmet, two hoses for inhalation and exhalation, a suit and a reservoir, dragged by and behind the diver,[17] although Fréminet later put it on his back.[18]: 46  Fréminet called his invention machine hydrostatergatique and used it successfully for more than ten years in the harbours of Le Havre and Brest, as stated in the explanatory text of a 1784 painting.[19][20]
  • 1774: John Day became the first person known to have died in an underwater accident while testing a "diving chamber" in Plymouth Sound.[21][22]
  • 1776:
    Turtle, first submarine to attack another ship. It was used in the American Revolution.[23]
  • 1797: Karl Heinrich Klingert designed a full diving dress which consisted of a large metal helmet and similarly large metal belt connected by a leather jacket and pants.[24]
  • 1798: in June, F. W. Joachim, employed by Klingert, successfully completed the first practical tests of Klingert's armor.[25]
  • 1800:
    Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden.[26]
  • 1800:
  • 1825:
    tinned copper with space for a crew of 2-3 persons, equipped with compass and methods of communication to the surface, successfully diving down to about 16 meters with Ljungström and an assistant on board, and wrote a book on the organization of private underwater diving[28][29]
  • c1831: American
    Charles Condert built an autonomous diving suit, using a copper pipe curved in the form of a horseshoe, displacing about 50 pounds of water, and worn at the waist, as an air reservoir which fed compressed air through a manually operated valve and a hose into an airtight rubberised hip length tunic with integral hood. Air escaped from a small hole in the hood. The buoyancy of the set required about 200 pounds of weight for ballast. Condert made several dives in the East River to about 20ft, and was drowned on his last dive in 1832.[30]
  • 1837: Captain William H. Taylor demonstrated his "submarine dress" at the annual American Institute Fair at Niblo's Garden, New York City.[31]
  • 1839:
    • Canadian inventors James Eliot and Alexander McAvity of Saint John, New Brunswick patented an "oxygen reservoir for divers", a device carried on the diver's back containing "a quantity of condensed oxygen gas or common atmospheric air proportionate to the depth of water and adequate to the time he is intended to remain below".[32]
    • W.H.Thornthwaite of Hoxton in London patented an inflatable lifting jacket for divers.[33]
  • Around 1842: The Frenchman Joseph-Martin Cabirol (1799–1874) formed a company in Paris and started making standard diving dress.[34]
  • 1843: Based on lessons learned from the Royal George salvage, the first diving school was set up by the Royal Navy.[35]
  • 1845 James Buchanan Eads designed and built a diving bell and began salvaging cargo from the bottom of the Mississippi River, eventually working on the river bottom from the mouth of the river at the Gulf of Mexico to Iowa.[36]
  • 1856: Wilhelm Bauer started the first of 133 successful dives with his second submarine Seeteufel. The crew of 12 was trained to leave the submerged ship through a diving chamber (airlock).[37]
  • 1860:
    Franz Joseph.[38]
  • 1864:
    H.L. Hunley became the first submarine to sink a ship, the USS Housatonic, during the American Civil War.[39]
  • 1866: Minenschiff, the first self-propelled (locomotive) torpedo, developed by Robert Whitehead (to a design by Captain Luppis, Austrian Navy), was demonstrated for the imperial naval commission on 21 December.[40]
  • 1882: Brothers
    anthropomorphic design of ADS (atmospheric diving suit). Featuring 22 rolling convolute joints that were never entirely waterproof and a helmet with 25 2-inch (51 mm) glass viewing ports,[41] it weighed 380 kilograms (840 lb) and was never put in service.[42]

Rebreathers

  • 1808: on 17 June, Sieur
    sponge soaked in limewater.[43] Touboulic called his invention Ichtioandre (Greek for 'fish-man').[44]
  • 1849: Pierre-Aimable de Saint Simon Sicard (a chemist) made the first practical oxygen rebreather. It was demonstrated in London in 1854.[33]
  • 1853: Professor T. Schwann designed a rebreather in
    caustic soda
    .
  • 1876: An English merchant seaman,
    caustic potash to absorb carbon dioxide so the exhaled gas could be re-breathed.[46]

Diving helmets improved and in common use

  • 1808: Brizé-Fradin designed a small bell-like helmet connected to a low-pressure backpack air container.[33]
  • 1820: Paul Lemaire d'Augerville (a Parisian dentist) invented a diving apparatus with a copper backpack cylinder, a counterlung to save air, and with an inflatable life jacket connected. It was used down to 15 or 20 meters for up to an hour in salvage work. He started a successful salvage company.[33]
  • 1825: William H. James designed a self-contained diving suit with compressed air stored in an iron container worn around the waist.[47]
  • 1827: Beaudouin in France developed a diving helmet fed from an air cylinder pressurized to 80 to 100 bar. The French Navy was interested, but nothing came of this.[33]
  • 1829: (1828?)
    • Charles Anthony Deane and John Deane of Whitstable in Kent in England designed the first diving helmet supplied with airpumped from the surface, for use with a diving suit. It is said [by whom?]that the idea started from a crude emergency rig-up of a fireman's water-pump (used as an air pump) and a knight-in-armour helmet used to try to rescue horses from a burning stable. Others say that it was based on earlier work in 1823 developing a "smoke helmet".[48] The suit was not attached to the helmet, so a diver could not bend over or invert without risk of flooding the helmet and drowning. Nevertheless, the diving system was used in salvage work, including the successful removal of cannon from the British warship HMS Royal George in 1834–35. This 108-gun fighting ship sank in 65 feet of water at Spithead anchorage in 1783.[48][47]
    • three-bolt equipment".[47]
  • 1837: Following up
    surface supplied diving apparatus which became known as standard diving dress.[49] By sealing the Deane brothers' helmet design to a waterproof suit, Augustus Siebe developed the Siebe "Closed" Dress combination diving helmet and suit, considered the foundation of modern diving dress. This was a significant evolution from previous models of "open" dress that did not allow a diver to invert. Siebe-Gorman went on to manufacture helmets continuously until 1975.[48]
  • 1840: The Royal Navy used Siebe closed dress for salvage and blasting work on the "Royal George", and subsequently the Royal Engineers standardised on this equipment.[48]
  • 1843: The Royal Navy established the first diving school.[48]
  • 1855:
    Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers in Paris.[50]

The first diving regulators

Diving set by Rouquayrol and Denayrouze with barrel-shaped air tank on the diver's back, depicted here in its surface-supplied configuration.
  • 1838: Dr. Manuel Théodore Guillaumet invented a twin-hose
    surface-demand use. During the demonstration, use duration was limited to 30 minutes because the dive was in cold water without a diving suit.[53][54][18]
    : 45 
  • 1860: in Espalion (France), mining engineer Benoît Rouquayrol designed a self-contained breathing set with a backpack cylindrical air tank that supplied air through the first demand regulator to be commercialized (as of 1865, see below). Rouquayrol calls his invention régulateur ('regulator'), having conceived it to help miners avoid drowning in flooded mines.[55]
  • 1864: Benoît Rouquayrol met navy officer Auguste Denayrouze for the first time, in Espalion, and on Denayrouze's initiative, they adapted Rouquayrol's invention to diving. After having adapted it, they called their recently patented device appareil plongeur Rouquayrol-Denayrouze ('Rouquayrol-Denayrouze diving apparatus'). The diver still walked on the seabed and did not swim. The air pressure tanks made with the technology of the time could only hold 30 atmospheres, allowing dives of only 30 minutes at no more than ten meters deep;[56] during surface-supplied configuration the tank was also used for bailout in the case of a hose failure.[56]
  • 1865: on August the 28th the French Navy Minister ordered the first Rouquayrol-Denayrouze diving apparatus and large scale production started.[43]

Gas and air cylinders appear

  • Late 19th century: Industry began to be able to make high-pressure air and gas cylinders. That prompted a few inventors down the years to design open-circuit compressed air breathing sets, but they were all constant-flow, and the demand regulator did not come back until 1937.[47]

Underwater photography

The oceanographer and biologist Emil Racoviță, here equipped with a standard diving dress. An underwater photograph taken by Louis Boutan (Banyuls-sur-Mer, south of France, 1899).
  • 1856: William Thompson Archived 12 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine and his friend Mr Kenyon take the first under water photograph using a camera sealed in a metal box.[57][58]
  • 1893: Louis Boutan makes the first under water camera becoming the first underwater photographer and produces the first clear underwater photographs.[59][60]
  • 1900: Louis Boutan published La Photographie sous-marine et les progrès de la photographie (The Underwater Photography and the Advances in Photography), the first book about underwater photography.[60]

Decompression sickness recognised as a problem

  • 1841: Jacques Triger constructs the first caisson for mining work in France. First two cases of decompression sickness in caisson workers are reported by Triger in 1845, consisting of joint and extremity pains.[13]
  • 1846-1855: Several cases of decompression sickness, some with fatal outcome, reported in caisson workers during bridge construction first in France, then in England. Recompression is reported to help alleviate symptoms by Pol and Wattelle in 1847, and a gradual compression and decompression is advocated by Thomas Littleton in 1855.[13][61]
  • From 1870 to 1910 all prominent features of decompression sickness were established, but theories over the pathology ranged from cold or exhaustion causing reflex spinal cord damage; electricity caused by friction on compression; or organ congestion and vascular stasis caused by decompression.[13]
  • 1870: Louis Bauer, a professor of surgery from St. Lous, publishes an initial report on the outcomes of 25 paralyzed caisson workers involved in the construction of the
    St Louis Eads Bridge.[62] The construction project eventually employed 352 compressed air workers including Dr. Alphonse Jaminet as the physician in charge. There were 30 seriously injured and 12 fatalities. Dr. Jaminet himself suffered a case of decompression sickness when he ascended to the surface in four minutes after spending almost three hours at a depth of 95 feet in a caisson, and his description of his own experience was the first such recorded.[63] While obviously caused by the increased pressure, both Bauer and Jaminet theorized that the symptoms were caused by a hypermetabolic state caused by the increase in oxygen, with inability to remove waste products in normal pressure. Gradual compression and decompression, shorter shifts with longer intervals, and complete rest after decompression were advocated. Actual cases were treated with rest, beef tea, ice, and alcohol.[64]
  • 1872: The similarity between decompression sickness and
    ATA); using only healthy workers; and recompression treatment for severe cases.[13]
  • 1873: Dr. Andrew Smith first used the term "caisson disease" to describe 110 cases of decompression sickness as the physician in charge during construction of the
    John Augustus Roebling died of tetanus.) Washington's wife, Emily, helped manage the construction of the bridge after his sickness confined him to his home in Brooklyn
    . He battled the after-effects of the disease for the rest of his life.

According to different sources, the term "The Bends" for decompression sickness was coined by workers of either the Brooklyn or the Eads bridge, and was given because afflicted individuals characteristically arched their backs in a manner similar to a then-fashionable posture known as the Grecian Bend.[63]

  • 1878: Paul Bert published La Pression barométrique, providing the first systematic understanding of the causes of DCS.[67]

Twentieth century

The demand regulator reappears

World War II

Postwar

Public interest in scuba diving takes off

Norwegian diving pioneer Odd Henrik Johnsen with 1960's diving equipment.

Twenty-first century

See also

  • Timeline of atmospheric diving suits

References

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External links

There are other diving history chronologies at: