MagPortal.com   Clustify - document clustering
 Home  |  Newsletter  |  My Articles  |  My Account  |  Help 
Similar Articles
Fast Company
September 2000
Bill Breen
(Really) Risky Business Wes Skiles is one of the leading practitioners of what may be the world's most hazardous sport: underwater cave diving. There is no injury rate for mistakes made in an underwater cave -- only a mortality rate. So why does Skiles keep diving? mark for My Articles similar articles
Outside
August 2005
Tim Zimmermann
Raising the Dead At the bottom of the biggest underwater cave in the world, diving deeper than almost anyone had ever gone, Dave Shaw found the body of a young man who had disappeared ten years earlier. mark for My Articles similar articles
Finefishing Saltwater
Larry Larsen
Fish Dive In Florida Finding America's favorite fishing & diving waters mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
February 2010
Giselle Weiss
Dream Jobs 2010: Ernst Vollm, Rapture of the Deep Ernst Vollm makes the dive computer that every aquanaut wants mark for My Articles similar articles
Entrepreneur
July 2007
Sara Wilson
More Than a Mirage Where others saw nothing but desert, a couple looking to train divers saw an ocean of possibilities. mark for My Articles similar articles
Popular Mechanics
September 2007
Josh Harkinson
Deadly Coast Guard Dive: What Went Wrong A routine training exercise on a day off from a polar icebreaker ended in tragedy. Coast Guard officials believe the most important lesson to be gleaned from the accident in Alaska is to follow the rules. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
December 2004
Jeffrey M. O'Brien
To Hell and Back Bill Stone has invented diving gear and roving robots to explore the deepest - and deadliest - caves on earth. In the icy water 4,500 feet below Mexico he had to figure out how to bring his dead friend home. mark for My Articles similar articles