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Things can go wrong quickly in cave diving. Deep underwater, where visibility is measured in a few feet and where communication is limited to hand signals, the margin of error is slim. One wrong turn, one bad decision, a piece of equipment that malfunctions, can turn a recreational dive into disaster in a matter of seconds. ...more
November 14, 2008
The Pasco County Sheriff's Office has identified the two divers whose bodies were found Wednesday night in underwater caves in Pasco County. ...more
November 13, 2008
Pasco County sheriff's deputies are searching for two divers who went missing Tuesday at School Sink in Hudson. ...more
November 12, 2008
SEBRING — Mike Edmonston is determined to solve the mystery raised by a photo sent to him by his father. It shows two large sea caves opening just above the low-tide waterline on the rocky shore of a small, uninhabited island in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Panama. It's what you can't see in the photo that fascinates him. The absence of a cave diver's safety line anchored at either opening tells him chances are nobody's ever dove into the caves. For sure, Edmonston knows that nobody has ever charted or named, much less filmed, those remote underwater caves. That's going to change early next year when he and wife, Beth, both certified cave divers, explore that unknown underwater world. "We don't know if the caves go in 10 feet or 10,000 feet," he said. "But we're going to find out." ...more
October 16, 2007
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