University professor ‘Dr Deep Sea’ sets record for living underwater

University professor ‘Dr Deep Sea’ sets record for living underwater
A US college professor broke a report for the longest time residing underwater with out depressurisation this weekend at a Florida Keys lodge for scuba divers.

Joseph Dituri’s 74th day residing in Jules’ Undersea Lodge, located on the backside of a 30-foot-deep lagoon in Key Largo, wasn’t a lot completely different than his earlier days there since he submerged March 1.

Dituri, who additionally goes by the moniker “Dr Deep Sea,” ate a protein-heavy meal of eggs and salmon ready utilizing a microwave, exercised with resistance bands, did his day by day pushups and took an hour-long nap.

Diving explorer and medical researcher Dr Joseph Dituri friends out of a giant porthole. (Frazier Nivens/Florida Keys News Bureau through AP)

Unlike a submarine, the lodge doesn’t use know-how to regulate for the elevated underwater stress.

The earlier report of 73 days, two hours and 34 minutes was set by two Tennessee professors – Bruce Cantrell and Jessica Fain – on the identical location in 2014.

But Dituri is not simply settling for the report and resurfacing: he plans to remain on the lodge till June 9, when he reaches 100 days and completes an underwater mission dubbed Project Neptune 100.

The mission combines medical and ocean analysis together with academic outreach and was organised by the Marine Resources Development Foundation, the proprietor of the habitat.

Diving explorer and medical researcher Dr Joseph Dituri waves to scuba diver Thane Milhoan. (Frazier Nivens/Florida Keys News Bureau through AP)

“The record is a small bump and I really appreciate it,” Dituri, a University of South Florida educator who holds a doctorate in biomedical engineering and is a retired US Naval officer, stated.

“I’m honoured to have it, but we still have more science to do.”

His analysis contains day by day experiments in physiology to watch how the human physique responds to long-term publicity to excessive stress.

“The idea here is to populate the world’s oceans, to take care of them by living in them and really treating them well,” Dituri stated.

The outreach portion of Dituri’s mission contains conducting on-line courses and broadcast interviews from his digital studio beneath the ocean.

An oarfish captivates tourists in Mexico.

Mysterious creatures of the deep

During the previous 74 days, he has reached over 2500 college students by way of on-line courses in marine science and extra together with his common biomedical engineering programs on the University of South Florida.

While he says he loves residing beneath the ocean, there may be one factor he actually misses.

“The thing that I miss the most about being on the surface is literally the sun,” Dituri stated.

“The sun has been a major factor in my life – I usually go to the gym at five and then I come back out and watch the sunrise.”

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Source: www.9news.com.au