diving
14-Year-Old Diver Competed to Earn Money for Sick Mom. Her Dives Were Literally Perfect.
The new Olympic record holder has never been to amusement parks or zoos, but hopes to one day play on claw machines.
It’s Hard to Hate Your Body When You’re Diving 100 Feet Without Oxygen
Learning to dive without SCUBA equipment reduces your existence to the next breath you're taking.
34 Missing and Feared Dead After Scuba Diving Boat Catches Fire off California Coast
The 75-foot boat caught fire in the early morning hours while divers were sleeping below deck.
The Gold Coast Might Get An Underwater Cemetery
Want to boost tourism and rest in peace for eternity? Well do we have a plan for you.
Is Cheating in Soccer More Acceptable in Some Countries than Others?
There have long been stereotypes that some cultures are OK with diving and other more controversial bits of gamesmanship, but that may not actually be the case.
The Indigenous Scientist Making Waves in Marine Conservation
Editor Brian Anderson traveled to the Salish Sea to hang out with drummer, diver, and scientist, Hozoji Matheson-Margullis.
This Indie Star Found a New Perspective On Life Under the Sea
How Ricky Virgana, of White Shoes & the Couples Company, turned his diving hobby into a side career.
Hunter and Gatherer: Lobster Luke
Instead of paying nearly $40 per pound for California spiny lobster, Luke "Lobster Luke" Sandburg braves the dark waters off the California coast and catches those bad boys himself.
Fracking for Scallops off of Southern California's Oil Rigs
"The conditions aren't always ideal and divers have been swept off to sea at the rigs in the past."
Retroactive Bans Won't Stop Diving in Football
Under a new rule, diving that results in a penalty or red card will be punished with two-match retroactive bans. But the benefits of flopping still outweigh the costs.
Retroactive Bans Won't Stop Diving in Soccer
Under a new rule, diving that results in a penalty or red card will be punished with two-match retroactive bans. But the benefits of flopping still outweigh the costs.
This mother and daughter are among Japan's last "ama," female fishers who free-dive for seafood
The legendary "ama," or sea-women, make their money fishing along the coasts of Japan without the help of a breathing apparatus. They are part of a tradition that stretches back thousands of years to Japan's hunter-gather origins.