Have any of you dove to the site of Sealab II in La Jolla?
From what I was reading, the Navy apparently abandoned all sea floor habitats after one of their divers died of carbon dioxide asphyxiation on a mission to repair a helium leak on Sealab III (620 feet deep).
I found this about Sealab II from the Scripps Institute of Oceanography Archives:
Other info that I found talks about the "SEALAB II structure 205 feet deep one mile off La Jolla".
According to another account from The High Performance Wireless Research and Education Network:
This sounds like a really cool historical place to dive to. With the proper training, of course.
Christian
From what I was reading, the Navy apparently abandoned all sea floor habitats after one of their divers died of carbon dioxide asphyxiation on a mission to repair a helium leak on Sealab III (620 feet deep).
I found this about Sealab II from the Scripps Institute of Oceanography Archives:
SIO Archives:August 26-October 10, 1965: SeaLab II, a manned underwater saturation habitat, is operated for 45 days without problem northwest of the SIO Pier on a ledge in Scripps Canyon at a depth of 205-feet. Astronaut turned Aquanaut Scott Carpenter chats from the habitat with orbiting astronaut Gordon Cooper in Gemini V. Later, Aquanaut/SIO graduate student Richard Grigg spoke from the habitat with the French Conshelf III undersea habitat off Monaco at 328-feet.
Other info that I found talks about the "SEALAB II structure 205 feet deep one mile off La Jolla".
According to another account from The High Performance Wireless Research and Education Network:
HPWREN:February 13, 2002
Wireless Tests Aboard US Navy Ship Include Exploration of USN/SIO SeaLab II
Earlier this month, the U.S. Navy Deep Submergence Unit (USN-DSU) brought their ship, the Kellie Chouest, as well as the Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) Scorpio, to the waters off Scripps pier. Their mission: to locate and dive the site of SeaLab II, a USN/SIO undersea habitat that operated in August-October 1965. This would be the first return to the site since the habitat was pulled up. This cruise was a regularly scheduled training exercise for the USN-DSU personnel; however, several guests (including UCSD faculty and staff) were able to join the crew for a day-long excursion.
This sounds like a really cool historical place to dive to. With the proper training, of course.
Christian