lamont
Contributor
True, but can you understand how a diver would inflate their lungs nearly full at 130' and ascent 55' without exhaling? Remember they were fighting a down-current so both would be have a high respiration rate from exertion. Yes there is about a 50% volume change between those depths but it is over 55', not 16½' like where the vast majority of embolisms occur.
4 feet of water is sufficient to overexpand the lungs, which is only 12%, which is the same as a 12 foot change from 82 feet to 70 feet. You keep trying to make it a 55' change that is required to cause lung injury but I just showed that your math is incorrect and substantially smaller changes in depth can cause injury. We also don't know where the injury occurred, only where she was last seen.
The last body recovery I did here was of a diver who was last seen corking from around 70-80 feet or possibly a little bit deeper, and he most certainly died from AGE due to barotrauma.