If you do it at a sanctioned jumping facility. With personnel that are trained. You have a better chance of being struck by lightening twice inside a rubber building. Safety rating is what you should be concerned about. The highest safety rated country in bungee is Japan, followed by Canada and I believe NZ. USA is somewhere in the top 10.
You die
He died during a segment on bungee jumping. He was going to propose to Hillary on the way down from his bungee jump. Unfortunately, they gave him just a bit too much rope. He hit the ground...and died.
No information is available about how often bungee cords snap while in use. Most fatal bungee cord accidents are caused by human error and not the cord.
Once upon a time, there was a young boy who lived in a small village.
Extending a rubber band allows it to store more potential energy, which can provide a greater force to slow down the jumper during bungee jumping. This can lead to a smoother and more controlled descent. However, if the rubber band is extended too much, it may lose its elasticity and not provide enough resistance to safely decelerate the jumper.
Dying While Black was created in 2006.
A lotus flower
No they cant because they are dying!
yes
Did you mean Bungee Jumping?Bungy jumping (or bungee jumping) is the sport that originated from New Zealand and was created by maverick daredevil A J Hackett, and his original jump from a bridge in Greenhithe, Auckland. The sport denotes jumping from a tall structure while connected to a large rubber cord. The tall structure is usually a fixed object, such as a building, bridge, or crane; but it is also possible to jump from a movable object, such as a hot-air-balloon or a helicopter, that has the ability to hover over one spot on the ground; fixed-wing aircraft are clearly unsuitable because they only stay aloft when moving rapidly forward. The intense thrill comes as much from the free-falls as from the rebounds.[1] When the person jumps, the cord stretches to absorb the energy of the fall, then the jumper flies upwards again as the cord snaps back. The jumper oscillates up and down until all the energy is used up.From Wikipedia.
Kangaroos and other macropods such as wallabies and wallaroos use their tail to balance while jumping.
No. Absolutely not.