Some medical conditions that restrict the movement of a diver's arms and legs may in turn limit in-water mobility. Additionally, some people may experience pain or discomfort with the physical exertion of Scuba diving. Before training, a medical evaluation would be necassary. Such health issues would require individual evaluation by a physician before learning to dive.
They sometimes do cause damage to the reefs, but are not usually to blame for killing entire reefs; that is something that only larger forces can cause, such as climate change or a huge hurricane.
scuba diving
Yes. The chemical imbalance inside your brain when diving at deep depths and then returning to surface is proven to cause gaydom. (see msgt hall for further questions)
Acoustic trauma: caused by exposure to very loud noises, leading to damage to the delicate structures of the inner ear. Barotrauma: occurs when there is a rapid change in air pressure, commonly experienced during air travel or scuba diving, which can damage the eardrum. Infection: such as otitis media or otitis externa, can cause damage to the ear canal or middle ear structures if left untreated.
Either, depending on context. Usually, if used as a noun it is SCUBA; as an adjective, as in scuba diver, it is just scuba.
It's called scuba diving.It's called scuba diving.It's called scuba diving.It's called scuba diving.It's called scuba diving.It's called scuba diving.
they eat jelly fish and when go Scuba diving most of us are lucky cause if a jellyfish stings you,you could die
Scuba diving.
A scuba diver is a human who enjoys scuba diving. Therefore, a scuba diver has a spine and is a vertebrate.
A scuba diver should not ascend rapidly, because the nitrogen in their bloodstream will lose pressure and create bubbles in the bloodstream. This will cause decompression sickness, which can be fatal.
No, but "scuba-diving" is a verb.
'SCUBA' is a noun, referring to the breathing apparatus. 'SCUBA dive' is the verb, with 'SCUBA dived' as the past-tense form.