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  2. Police diving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_diving

    In the US, diving training agencies such as Emergency Response Diving International (ERDI), Special Response Diving International (SRDI), formally the National Academy of Police Diving, Team Lifeguard Systems, and Underwater Criminal Investigators have courses to train divers in public safety diving. [7] [8] [9] [10]

  3. United States Marine Corps Combatant Diver Course - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Marine_Corps...

    Both of the Marine Air-Ground Task Force reconnaissance assets, FMF Recon and MarDiv Recon, widely use combatant diving. During this eight-week course, trainees are introduced to open and closed-circuit diving (using the Dräger LAR-V rebreather), diving physics and medical aid. Most of the training in combatant diving is done at night.

  4. List of diver certification organizations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_diver...

    MTES - Marine Techno Educational System diving division. CMAS code JPN/F04 [1] MUF - Maldives Underwater Federation CMAS code MDV/F01 [1] NADD - NADD Global Diving Agency CMAS code ITA/F03 [1] EUF S 000513 [6] NASE - National Academy of Scuba Educators – Recreational scuba training and certification agency EUF CB 2008003 [6] [4]

  5. Recreational scuba certification levels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recreational_scuba...

    A diver training standard is a document issued by a certification, registration, regulation or quality assurance agency, that describes the prerequisites for participation, the aim of the training programme, the specific competences that a candidate must demonstrate to be assessed as competent, and the minimum required experience that must be recorded before the candidate can be registered or ...

  6. Military diving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_diving

    Underwater divers may be employed in any branch of an armed force, including the navy, army, marines, air force and coast guard. Scope of operations includes: search and recovery, search and rescue, hydrographic survey, explosive ordnance disposal, demolition, underwater engineering, salvage, ships husbandry, reconnaissance, infiltration, sabotage, counterifiltration, underwater combat and ...

  7. Underwater search and recovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underwater_search_and_recovery

    Public safety diving team members bring in a casualty Controlling an underwater search from the jetty. Underwater search and recovery is the process of locating and recovering underwater objects, often by divers, [1] but also by the use of submersibles, remotely operated vehicles and electronic equipment on surface vessels.

  8. Edward D. Thalmann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_D._Thalmann

    Capt. Edward Deforest Thalmann, USN (ret.) (April 3, 1945 – July 24, 2004) was an American hyperbaric medicine specialist who was principally responsible for developing the current United States Navy dive tables for mixed-gas diving, which are based on his eponymous Thalmann Algorithm (VVAL18). [1]

  9. Special Forces Underwater Operations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_Forces_Underwater...

    The US Army Special Forces founded the Special Forces Underwater Operations School in Trumbo Point Annex, Naval Air Station Key West, in 1964. [5] Prior to that SF Detachment-Alphas were receiving disparate levels of dive training at their respective groups.