On 1 November 2020, PADI Open Water Diver Linnea Rose Mills [1] drowned during a training dive in Lake McDonald in Glacier National Park, Montana, while using an unfamiliar and defective equipment configuration, with excessive weights, no functional dry suit inflation mechanism, and a buoyancy compensator too small to support the weights, which were not configured to be ditched in an emergency. [2] [3] She had never been trained or even given a basic orientation in the use of a dry suit. This defective equipment configuration was supplied by the dive school, and the instructor, who was registered but had not been assessed as competent to train dry suit diving, did not take appropriate action compliant with PADI training standards or general recreational diving best practice, at several stages of the dive. [3]
During the dive, her dry suit was compressed by the ambient pressure, and as she was unable to add gas to restore buoyancy, she became negatively buoyant and was unable to swim upwards, further hindered by suit squeeze. She fell off an underwater ledge while trying to attract the attention of the instructor, and though a fellow diver attempted to stop her descent, he was unable to ditch any of her weights and had to surface to save himself.
The incident was poorly investigated and as of November 2024, no criminal charges have been made, but a civil case for $12 million was eventually settled out of court, and counsel for the plaintiffs has urged the state to prosecute. The Professional Association of Diving Instructors was alleged to have failed in their duty of care by not providing sufficient quality assurance oversight on the dive school and instructor, and by setting standards for training that were ambiguous and in places contradictory, relying on interpretation by the service provider, which allowed plausible deniability of responsibility by PADI if an accident occurred. [3]
The Missoula dive shop Gull Dive, owned by David and Jeannine Olson, was advertised as a PADI dive school, rented equipment to Mills, and employed the dive instructor responsible for the training. [3]
The dive site, Lake McDonald is a cold freshwater environment, [4] and a dry suit would be standard equipment for the expected conditions. Lake McDonald is the largest lake in Glacier National Park. It is located at 48°35′N113°55′W / 48.583°N 113.917°W in Flathead County in the U.S. state of Montana. Lake McDonald is approximately 10 miles (16 km) long, over a mile (1.6 km) wide, and 472 feet (144 m) deep, filling a valley formed by a combination of erosion and glacial activity, with steep sides and a relatively flat bottom, requiring good buoyancy control to avoid sinking to excessive depths if overweighted. [5] The surface area of the lake is 6,823 acres (27.61 km2). Lake McDonald lies at an elevation of 3,153 feet (961 m) [6] and is on the west side of the Continental Divide. [7] Atmospheric pressure at this altitude is approximately 89% of sea level, and this causes gas volume reduction at depth due to hydrostatic pressure to be greater than at sea level, which exacerbates the effects of suit squeeze. Altitude decompression is also affected by the lower surface pressure, and decompression schedules and algorithms must be adjusted to control the risk of decompression sickness. These problems are generally not familiar to divers who have not been trained in altitude diving.
The diver certification agency, PADI, is the largest recreational diver training agency in the world, and has considerable influence over international minimum training standards by virtue of their overwhelming worldwide market share. PADI training is focused on short, convenient courses, marketed by an emphasis on "fun" and claiming high standards of safety. As of 2020, PADI claims to have issued 28 million scuba certifications of all levels, many of which may be minor specializations. Some of the certifications align with WRSTC and ISO minimum standards, and these are recognized worldwide. Many of the others are not relevant for recognition, as they are unique to PADI and have no equivalence anywhere, or may be part of other agencies' standards for certification for more general diving skill levels, or are not universally accepted as necessary for diver competence or safety. PADI advertises itself as having a strong quality assurance system for members, which include PADI Instructors, PADI Divemasters, and PADI Dive schools, which are contractually obliged to adhere to PADI's standards and pay a significant annual membership fee for the privilege of using the highly recognized PADI name and logo, and for selling PADI training materials and certification. As the training agency, PADI is responsible for ensuring that all certification issued under terms of recognition by international standards agencies, complies with the relevant international standards. PADI is owned by Canadian investment firm Altas Partners and French private equity firm Florac. [8]
The instructor, Debbie Snow, a newly certified [a] PADI Open Water Scuba Instructor, [b] was initially trained as an instructor in Florida in warm sea water but did not pass the evaluation on her first attempt. Two months later she was reevaluated and registered as an instructor with PADI. At this time she was also registered as an instructor for five specialty courses, including Dry Suit Diver by Rainbow Reef, the school she was trained at as an Open Water Instructor, [9] [10] Dry suit diving and altitude diving expose the diver to a set of hazards not generally encountered in entry-level diving as covered by the Open Water Diver course. [11] Such levels of training are generally considered to require specialization training for recreational divers to allow the diver to dive safely and make an informed acceptance of risk. Snow's familiarity with the dive site is unknown.
Snow was assisted by another employee at Gull Dive, Seth Linton (22), whose only diving certification was Junior Open Water Diver, [3] a certification issued to entry level divers between 10 and 14 years old, otherwise equivalent to PADI Open Water Diver. His further experience was not specified, but stated to be hardly greater than that of Mills. [12] [c]
The decedent, Linnea Mills (18), was certified as a PADI Open Water Diver, had a total experience of five dives in warm water and one dive in Lake Seeley, in cold water, in a wetsuit, and had never dived in a dry suit before the incident. [9] She was enrolled on a PADI Advanced Open Water Diver course through Gull Dive, of Missoula. [13] [14]
Mills was wearing a second hand dry suit purchased from a private seller, facilitated by the dive school, because they could not rent a dry suit to a diver who had not been trained in the use of a dry suit. Mills had not used a dry suit before, but she was not given a theory class, a briefing or confined water orientation in dry suit diving before the dive, which would have allowed the selection of appropriate weights and identified any obvious defects or other problems. The dry suit had a relatively uncommon CEJN connector inflation fitting and the scuba diving regulator set rented from the school did not have a compatible dry suit inflation hose connected, so it was not possible to add gas to relieve suit squeeze, or compensate for buoyancy reduction due to suit gas compression at depth. Mills was wearing a small, jacket style buoyancy compensation device (BCD) with a nominal lift capacity of 29.2 pounds (13.2 kg), rented from the school, and diving weights totaling 44 pounds (20 kg) distributed as 20 pounds (9.1 kg) in the zippered pockets of the dry suit and 24 pounds (11 kg) in the zippered pockets of the BCD, which could therefore not be easily jettisoned in an emergency, also supplied by the school. The watertight zipper of the suit was reported to not close completely and would therefore allow air to escape and water to leak in, and the suit was a poor fit with over-large boots and over-long trouser legs. [5] At the start of the dive, Mills had positive buoyancy with her head out of the water at the surface with an inflated BCD and an unflooded dry suit with unknown buoyancy. [d] [2]
Mills had not filled in a medical statement on enrolling for the course, nor any waiver, liability release, or assumption of risk. The dive school had rented equipment four months earlier to an uncertified diver who subsequently drowned while using it. [9]
The group of divers from Gull Dive arrived at Lake MacDonald at about 4 p.m. as daylight was fading. Two additional students who had completed dry suit training were already waiting there. While preparing for the dive, the instructor's assistant discovered that the regulator's low pressure hose fitting was incompatible with Mills' dry suit, and notified the instructor, who told Mills to use the BCD for buoyancy control during the dive. [14] [3] Use of the BCD is standard practice for general buoyancy control, but the absence of an inflator hose makes it impossible to relieve suit squeeze and retain basic suit buoyancy. [15] [5] Mills was given 44 pounds (20 kg) of loose dive weights instead of the standard quick-release weight belt or integrated weight pockets for the BCD, which were loaded into the dry suit (20 lb) [e] and BCD zipper pockets (24 lb). None of the weights were visible or easily jettisoned in an emergency by Mills or by another diver. [14] It is not known who put the weights in the suit's pockets. [5]
No on-site dive briefing was given, and Mills was not assigned a dive buddy, which would normally imply that the instructor would personally monitor the student throughout the dive, and the group entered the water at about 5 p.m., a short time before sunset. They descended to about 15 feet (4.6 m) and after about 5 minutes, one diver was cold and needed to surface. The instructor escorted the cold diver out of the water,[ clarification needed ] [14] leaving Mills without professional supervision or a properly allocated buddy. [f] After returning to the group, the instructor and assistant took Mills and Bob Gentry to 60 feet (18 m). Gentry was carrying an action camera on a frame with two video lights, which recorded much of the activity of the dive. [14] [10]
At 60 feet (18 m), the dry suit was significantly compressed by the ambient pressure of 1.8 atm above surface atmospheric pressure of about 0.89 atm. The air in the suit was compressed to less than 1/3 of the volume at the surface, and suit buoyancy had decreased in proportion. Mills was standing on a ledge, unable to swim upward due to insufficient buoyancy, and was unable to attract Snow's attention when she swam past with her attention apparently fixed on the compass in her hand. Mills then signaled to Gentry, the diver with the GoPro, who approached her to assist, but she fell backwards off the ledge and began sinking. Gentry eventually caught up with her at a depth of 85 feet (26 m), where suit squeeze would be making it relatively difficult for her to move. [3]
Gentry attempted to find and release Mills' weights but could not find them, and tried to provide her with air from his secondary demand valve when she dropped her demand valve. [g] An effort by Gentry to lift Mills and swim her up by finning hard failed and Gentry left her as his own air was running low. He made a rapid ascent to the surface from 105 feet (32 m) in less than a minute, putting himself at a raised risk of decompression illness. When he reached the surface, he was alone, but Snow surfaced after an undisclosed period. Gentry informed Snow of the emergency and she dived to look for Mills, but failed to find her. [h] On a second search dive, by Snow and Liston, Mills was found at 127 feet (39 m), a depth significantly greater than the 60 feet (18 m) limit set by PADI for Open Water Diver certification. Liston then made a rapid ascent to the surface and Mills was recovered to the surface by Snow, after ditching the scuba set with the weights in the BCD pockets. [14] [3]
Snow and Liston were airlifted to Seattle, Washington, "for treatment for potential injuries", since Liston had been complaining of effects of his rapid ascent and had used up the available emergency oxygen. [14] [3] [i] Consequently, they were not on site when the initial investigators and coroner arrived. [10]
Several other irregularities and alleged breaches of PADI procedure and general recreational diving safety procedure were cited in the complaint lodged for civil action, some of which may have had a material influence on the outcome of the dive. Others were more relevant to non-compliance with PADI standards by Gull Dive and Snow. [3]
The initial investigation was conducted by local park agents who consulted a range of diving specialists, but it was soon taken over by National Park Service Investigative Services Branch (ISB), who stopped consulting with diving accident experts, and did not even call in their own diving safety officer, dive team or diving control board, who would normally be involved in a diving fatality investigation. [16]
There were a number of irregularities in the investigation that the investigators may not have noticed, possibly due to a lack of training and expert advice. [16] This is not an isolated incident, as many diving accident investigations in the US have been poorly managed by investigators without the necessary competence. [17] [18] Allegedly the ISB did not consider the dive profiles of Snow and Mills as recorded by their dive computers, which showed that Snow was at the surface while Mills was drowning. According to counsel (David G. Concannon), [j] Snow had failed to hand over Mills’ dive computer and personal effects, including partially completed PADI forms, to investigators, [16] and the investigators did not pursue this. According to Concannon, Mills' dive computer was on her wrist when her body was taken ashore but was removed before the medics arrived, "found its way" into Debbie Snow's truck, and was taken home with her. The initial investigator from Glacier Park tried to find the computer which he thought had been taken to the morgue. The second group of investigators went to Snow's home to interview her, and were shown the dive computer, told it was not downloadable, shown the display of the dive profile and got a photo of it, which they were unable to interpret. They left the computer with Snow, and it was then passed on to a lawyer who worked with PADI, who took it to California along with Snow's computer and Liston's computer. It stayed there for one and a half years. The head of scientific diving at Scripps university downloaded them as a consultant to the lawyer, but the data was never produced as evidence until the civil litigants got a court order. A commentator raised the question of why PADI, which claimed to consider diver safety a high priority, would not actively work towards making the data public, as it would be in the interests of diver safety to do so. [10]
In US Federal Law the owner of equipment that logs data during an incident that may be the subject of litigation is obliged to preserve that data and make it available as evidence if the case comes to court at a later date. Litigants are required to find out what they have and disclose everything relevant to the opposition. [20]
The video of the incident was not taken into account by the federal investigators; non-divers reviewed PADI's training standards and only after the instructor had been interviewed. [16]
Jeannine Olson, who had no first-hand knowledge of the events of the dive, allegedly told the Flathead County Deputy Coroner that Mills was "witnessed by a dive buddy to panic, then fall passively to the bottom of a lake after swimming without difficulty at a depth of approximately 40 feet", which is contradicted by the evidence of the video recordings serendipitously made during the dive, which cover the events extensively. [10] As a result, the medical examiner did not document the bruising on Linnea's body caused by the dry suit squeeze or other complications arising from high pressure. Olson also allegedly contacted Gentry afterward, claiming he was responsible for Linnea's death. [14]
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The plaintiffs in the civil suit have alleged several breaches of general recreational diving safety protocols and violations of PADI and general recreational diving and training standards. [3] Some of the standards are not easily accessible for the general public, making it difficult for a diver with only an entry level certification to find out whether standards are being followed for a course they have not done. Consequently, students have little choice but to assume that the instructor is actually following the standards if they want to get the training. [9] Because the recreational diver training industry in the US is officially self-regulating, violations of training standards are not inherently illegal, and members of the public are obliged to fall back on assumptions of duty of care, contractual obligations, and expectation of a service provider to conduct appropriate safety measures, as generally accepted within the industry and as specifically required by the terms of training standards and membership agreements, for protection against negligence. The diving public also has an expectation that a training and certification agency will ensure that their members comply with their standards and terms of membership by way of an effective quality assurance system. [3] This situation is aggravated by the service provider requiring the client to sign waivers granting the service provider and certification agency indemnity for negligence to the greatest extent legally possible. [19]
In the Complaint and Demand for Jury Trial to the Montana Fourth Judicial District Court Missoula County, Concannon alleged several violations of PADI training and dive leadership standards: [3]
- Advising a client to purchase equipment that they knew the client was not competent to use. (dry suit)
- Failing to check whether equipment supplied was safe and compatible with the client's equipment, while in a teaching relationship with the client relating to that equipment. (regulator set with incompatible low pressure hose connection)
- Providing a client with unsafe equipment, in that it lacked necessary components to allow it to be used safely.(regulator set with low pressure hose connection incompatible with client's dry suit, and dive weights in excess of the BCD's capacity to support, with no facility to ditch the weights quickly in an emergency)
- Failing to inform a client that the equipment as supplied was unsafe. (regulator set and excessive dive weights with no ditchable component)
- Failing to verify whether a student understood how to use a combination of equipment as supplied. (regulator, BCD and weighting system supplied, to be used with client's dry suit)
- Failing to provide a student diver with instruction on how to safely operate the combination of equipment provided by the school with the client's dry suit.
- Providing and fitting the client with an inherently hazardous configuration of equipment. (overweighting with non-ditchable weights)
- Diving, and permitting a training dive to be made under their responsibility when the equipment was known to be unsafe. (gross overweighting, no suit inflation, inadequate buoyancy compensation)
- Failing to provide an adequate pre-dive briefing on a training dive.
- Failing to ensure that a competent person was available to oversee the rest of the group when dealing with a problem with one diver. The decedent was left without an instructor or a formally allocated buddy in a hazardous environment.
- Diving, and permitting a training dive to occur when there was no emergency plan, no emergency facilities in the vicinity, and no communications with emergency services.
- Leaving a person under instruction and personal supervision unattended while dealing with a third party problem.
- Failing to notice distress signals from a student without a buddy.
- Using an assistant with inadequate qualifications and experience. (Open Water Diver doing the job of a divemaster/rescue diver)
- Taking an unqualified person on a search and body recovery mission to depths far in excess of their training and certification. (Open Water Diver to 127ft)
While none of the above-mentioned breaches of standards are illegal, they are all violations of the terms of PADI RRA and instructor membership and any one would constitute negligence. Together they indicate gross negligence by industry standards.
Violations of Federal Law:
- Failing to hand over the dive computer of the decedent to the investigating officers (DS).
- Knowingly providing false and misleading information to investigating officers (JO).
- Attempts to intimidate and threaten a witness (JO).
After Mills' death PADI continued to issue certification in Snow's name, including to divers who were present on the fatal dive, and had not completed the course requirements for the dive due to the incident. [9]
The incident and subsequent civil lawsuit were reported with varying accuracy, detail, and neutrality or lack thereof, by a local television station, [21] [22] other local news sites. [11] [14] internet diving magazines and blogs. [16] [23] [4] [2] [9] [12]
There has been strong criticism of PADI's reactions and lack of reaction to this incident, including suggestions that PADI is more concerned with profit than diver safety. [9] [10] [5]
The quality of the investigation by the federal investigators of National Park Service Investigative Services Branch has been severely criticized for being incomplete and poorly conducted, with findings that are based on misinformation from some of the witnesses and disregarding video footage that is impartial, unambiguous and fairly comprehensive, and leading to the state attorney not having sufficient evidence to prosecute a convincing criminal case. There is no statute of limitations on homicide, and when additional evidence and leads were provided to the investigators by counsel for the plaintiffs, it appears to have been disregarded, so that four years after the incident no apparent progress has been made. [10] [5] [3]
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A wrongful death lawsuit was filed in Missoula County District Court by Mill’s parents and other dive trainees in May 2021 alleging that Gull Dive instructors were not sufficiently qualified and failed to follow several safety requirements stipulated by PADI training standards, and were negligent and failed to exercise reasonable care before, during and after the dive. [3]
It was alleged that Snow failed to check the equipment Mills was to train in, or her competence to use it, and allowed Mills to use an inappropriate and dangerous combination of gear. It was further alleged that during the dive, Snow failed to sufficiently monitor Mills’ situation or to take corrective actions as the incident developed. [11]
The suit was for $12 million for compensatory and punitive damages, [13] against Gull Dive, owners David and Jeannine Olson, diving instructor Debbie Snow, and shop employee and volunteer dive assistant Seth Liston. The Professional Association of Diving Instructors Worldwide Corporation, (PADI) and its wholly owned subsidiary PADI Americas Inc. was accused of negligence in its oversight of member businesses, but denied vicarious responsibility on grounds that member shops and instructors are not agents of PADI, which is no more than a professional organization and certifying agency, with members who operate independently, so PADI is therefore not responsible for their actions or omissions. [11]
PADI's argument that Gull Dive and their staff were neither its agents nor employees, and that it could not be held responsible for the death of a client of Gull Dive was overruled by a judge, who stated that PADI exerted control over Gull Dive and its instructors by way of its membership agreement, which obliged members to follow its standards and instructions. [16]
A settlement for an undisclosed amount was reached in February 2023. [13] Snow's membership of PADI was subsequently terminated on 19 January 2023, [24] about the time of the settlement. Gull Dive was dissolved by the owners in 2022. The volunteer safety diver was originally cited but later dropped from the suit. [16]
None of the defendants in the civil case were criminally charged after an initial investigation. The U.S. Attorney for the State of Montana declined to press criminal charges against Snow, claiming the state could not prove criminal culpability beyond reasonable doubt. [11]
Counsel for the plaintiffs in the civil case, David G. Concannon, suggested that if the federal investigators took the trouble to follow the chain of custody for the dive computer worn by Mills, which was taken out of state for two years, instead of being handed over to the investigators, they could charge those responsible for suppressing the evidence. [23]
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The Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI) is a recreational diving membership and diver training organization founded in 1966 by John Cronin and Ralph Erickson. PADI courses range from entry level to advanced recreational diver certification. Further, they provide several diving skills courses connected with specific equipment or conditions, some diving related informational courses and a range of recreational diving instructor certifications. They also offer various technical diving courses. As of 2020, PADI claims to have issued 28 million scuba certifications. The levels are not specified and may include minor specialisations. Some of the certifications align with WRSTC and ISO standards, and these are recognised worldwide. Some other certification is unique to PADI and has no equivalence anywhere, or may be part of other agencies' standards for certification for more general diving skill levels.
Recreational diver training is the process of developing knowledge and understanding of the basic principles, and the skills and procedures for the use of scuba equipment so that the diver is able to dive for recreational purposes with acceptable risk using the type of equipment and in similar conditions to those experienced during training.
Recreational diving or sport diving is diving for the purpose of leisure and enjoyment, usually when using scuba equipment. The term "recreational diving" may also be used in contradistinction to "technical diving", a more demanding aspect of recreational diving which requires more training and experience to develop the competence to reliably manage more complex equipment in the more hazardous conditions associated with the disciplines. Breath-hold diving for recreation also fits into the broader scope of the term, but this article covers the commonly used meaning of scuba diving for recreational purposes, where the diver is not constrained from making a direct near-vertical ascent to the surface at any point during the dive, and risk is considered low.
The buddy check is a procedure carried out by scuba divers using the buddy system where each dive buddy checks that the other's diving equipment is configured and functioning correctly just before the start of the dive. A study of pre-dive equipment checks done by individual divers showed that divers often fail to recognize common equipment faults. By checking each other's equipment as well as their own, it is thought to be more likely that these faults will be identified prior to the start of the dive. The correct use of a well designed written checklist is known to be more reliable, and is more likely to be used by professional divers, where it may be required by occupational health and safety legislation, and by technical divers, where the equipment checks are more complex.
Scuba diving is a mode of underwater diving whereby divers use breathing equipment that is completely independent of a surface breathing gas supply, and therefore has a limited but variable endurance. The name scuba is an acronym for "Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus" and was coined by Christian J. Lambertsen in a patent submitted in 1952. Scuba divers carry their own source of breathing gas, usually compressed air, affording them greater independence and movement than surface-supplied divers, and more time underwater than free divers. Although the use of compressed air is common, a gas blend with a higher oxygen content, known as enriched air or nitrox, has become popular due to the reduced nitrogen intake during long or repetitive dives. Also, breathing gas diluted with helium may be used to reduce the effects of nitrogen narcosis during deeper dives.
Scuba Schools International (SSI) is a for-profit organization that teaches the skills involved in scuba diving and freediving, and supports dive businesses and resorts. SSI has over 3,500 authorized dealers, 35 regional centers, and offices all over the world.
Sidemount is a scuba diving equipment configuration which has scuba sets mounted alongside the diver, below the shoulders and along the hips, instead of on the back of the diver. It originated as a configuration for advanced cave diving, as it facilitates penetration of tight sections of cave, allows easy access to cylinder valves, provides easy and reliable gas redundancy, and tanks can be easily removed when necessary. These benefits for operating in confined spaces were also recognized by divers who conducted technical wreck diving penetrations.
Advanced Open Water Diver (AOWD) is a recreational scuba diving certification level provided by several diver training agencies. Agencies offering this level of training under this title include Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI), and Scuba Schools International (SSI). Other agencies offer similar training under different titles. Advanced Open Water Diver is one step up from entry level certification as a beginner autonomous scuba diver. A major difference between Autonomous diver equivalent Open Water Diver (OWD) certification and AOWD is that the depth limit is increased from 18 to 30 metres.
Underwater search and recovery is the process of locating and recovering underwater objects, often by divers, but also by the use of submersibles, remotely operated vehicles and electronic equipment on surface vessels.
A diving instructor is a person who trains, and usually also assesses competence, of underwater divers. This includes freedivers, recreational divers including the subcategory technical divers, and professional divers which includes military, commercial, public safety and scientific divers.
Scuba skills are skills required to dive safely using self-contained underwater breathing apparatus, known as a scuba set. Most of these skills are relevant to both open-circuit scuba and rebreather scuba, and many also apply to surface-supplied diving. Some scuba skills, which are critical to divers' safety, may require more practice than standard recreational training provides to achieve reliable competence.
Scuba diving fatalities are deaths occurring while scuba diving or as a consequence of scuba diving. The risks of dying during recreational, scientific or commercial diving are small, and on scuba, deaths are usually associated with poor gas management, poor buoyancy control, equipment misuse, entrapment, rough water conditions and pre-existing health problems. Some fatalities are inevitable and caused by unforeseeable situations escalating out of control, though the majority of diving fatalities can be attributed to human error on the part of the victim.
Supervised diver specifies the training and certification for recreational scuba divers in international standard ISO 24801-1 and the equivalent European Standard EN 14153-1. Various diving organizations offer diving training that meets the requirements of the Supervised Diver. A diving certification which corresponds to the Supervised Diver allows for recreational diving under the direct supervision of a divemaster or recreational diving instructor in open water. Most diving organizations recommend not to exceed a diving depth of 10 to 12 metres. After the successful completion of a training equivalent to the Supervised diver, training can be extended to the Autonomous diver certification level.
Dive leader is the title of an internationally recognised recreational diving certification. The training standard describes the minimum requirements for dive leader training and certification for recreational scuba divers in international standard ISO 24801-3 and the equivalent European Standard EN 14153-3. Various organizations offer training that meets the requirements of the dive leader standard. Some agencies use the title "Dive Leader" for their equivalent certification, but several other titles are also used, "Divemaster" may be the most widespread, but "Dive Supervisor" is also used, and should not be confused with the very different status and responsibilities of a professional diving supervisor. CMAS affiliates certifications which meet the requirements of CMAS 3-star diver should meet the standard by default. The occupation of a dive leader is also known as "dive guide", and is a specialist application of a "tour guide".
The history of scuba diving is closely linked with the history of the equipment. By the turn of the twentieth century, two basic architectures for underwater breathing apparatus had been pioneered; open-circuit surface supplied equipment where the diver's exhaled gas is vented directly into the water, and closed-circuit breathing apparatus where the diver's carbon dioxide is filtered from the exhaled breathing gas, which is then recirculated, and more gas added to replenish the oxygen content. Closed circuit equipment was more easily adapted to scuba in the absence of reliable, portable, and economical high pressure gas storage vessels. By the mid-twentieth century, high pressure cylinders were available and two systems for scuba had emerged: open-circuit scuba where the diver's exhaled breath is vented directly into the water, and closed-circuit scuba where the carbon dioxide is removed from the diver's exhaled breath which has oxygen added and is recirculated. Oxygen rebreathers are severely depth limited due to oxygen toxicity risk, which increases with depth, and the available systems for mixed gas rebreathers were fairly bulky and designed for use with diving helmets. The first commercially practical scuba rebreather was designed and built by the diving engineer Henry Fleuss in 1878, while working for Siebe Gorman in London. His self contained breathing apparatus consisted of a rubber mask connected to a breathing bag, with an estimated 50–60% oxygen supplied from a copper tank and carbon dioxide scrubbed by passing it through a bundle of rope yarn soaked in a solution of caustic potash. During the 1930s and all through World War II, the British, Italians and Germans developed and extensively used oxygen rebreathers to equip the first frogmen. In the U.S. Major Christian J. Lambertsen invented a free-swimming oxygen rebreather. In 1952 he patented a modification of his apparatus, this time named SCUBA, an acronym for "self-contained underwater breathing apparatus," which became the generic English word for autonomous breathing equipment for diving, and later for the activity using the equipment. After World War II, military frogmen continued to use rebreathers since they do not make bubbles which would give away the presence of the divers. The high percentage of oxygen used by these early rebreather systems limited the depth at which they could be used due to the risk of convulsions caused by acute oxygen toxicity.
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to underwater diving:
Investigation of diving accidents includes investigations into the causes of reportable incidents in professional diving and recreational diving accidents, usually when there is a fatality or litigation for gross negligence.
Scuba diving tourism is the industry based on servicing the requirements of recreational divers at destinations other than where they live. It includes aspects of training, equipment sales, rental and service, guided experiences and environmental tourism.
Recreational scuba certification levels are the levels of skill represented by recreational scuba certification. Each certification level is associated with a specific training standard published by the certification agency, and a training programme associated with the standard., though in some cases recognition of prior learning can apply. These levels of skill can be categorised in several ways: