Spot the journalistic mistakes

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

tridacna

ScubaBoard Supporter
ScubaBoard Supporter
Scuba Instructor
Divemaster
Messages
9,857
Reaction score
7,953
Location
New Jersey
# of dives
2500 - 4999
Rutgers alum a father of SCUBA diving

How many mistakes in this article?

---------- Post added December 30th, 2015 at 01:39 PM ----------

Here's the text if the link doesn't work:

Human beings do not have gills, but swimming underwater as if we did has long been a basic urge. With his “amphibious respirator unit,” a prototype for what the world now calls SCUBA gear, Christian Lambertsen, Rutgers Class of 1939, made diving feasible for millions of people.


He also helped win a war.


When Lambertsen was a teenager, exploring the deep already fascinated him. He liked to dive on Barnegat Bay, where a cousin sitting in a rowboat would use a bicycle pump and hose to send him air. That primitive but innovative breathing apparatus planted a seed that Lambertsen would later cultivate.


After earning his bachelor's degree in biology at Rutgers, Lambertsen entered medical school at the University of Pennsylvania – just as Hitler's armies were beginning to overrun much of Europe. As the free world built its defenses, Lambertsen realized that allied navies would be much more effective if their divers could enter enemy-held waters undetected – to gather intelligence, booby-trap hostile ships or otherwise disrupt operations.


In the late 1930s, navy divers could not do that. Even if they had breathing equipment that let them swim and dive without being tethered to ships, carbon dioxide bubbles would rise to the surface each time they exhaled, making it easy for the enemy to spot and attack them.


Lambertsen would solve that problem by adapting technology from the anesthesia equipment he used as a medical student. During surgery physicians mix an anesthetic gas with air drawn from the atmosphere, using equipment that makes the mixture more breathable and effective by “scrubbing out" much of the carbon dioxide (CO2) that forms during respiration. Lambertsen imagined that similar “scrubbers” could help eliminate CO2 bubbles in war situations, and went to work perfecting his idea with an apparatus that he would both design and test underwater himself.


“From the way he told it to me, he very nearly drowned during his initial experiments,” recalled Aron Fisher, a professor of physiology at the University of Pennsylvania's medical school who was a student of Lambertsen's at Penn and then a longtime faculty colleague. “He was getting trapped underwater in the first contraption he designed.”


Soon enough, Lambertsen worked out the design kinks, and his system progressed to the point where divers could both inhale and exhale smoothly without a trace. He first presented his idea to the navy, which rejected it. But the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the precursor to today’s Central Intelligence Agency, realized what it had and put Lambertsen and his invention to work as part of the effort to win World War Two.


Lambertsen took charge of training OSS divers, was deployed with them to Burma, and would later receive the Legion of Merit for the success of their covert missions. “He is now known as the forerunner of the Navy SEALS,” Fisher said.


Once the war was won, and there was no more need for military secrecy, Lambertsen’s invention – which by then had earned the first of his 11 patents – became available to all. It is widely believed that Lambertsen coined the term SCUBA (for “self-contained underwater breathing apparatus&#8221:wink:, and by now millions of registered SCUBA divers have used it underwater either for work or recreation – able to explore the wonders of aquatic life with the same ability not to disturb their surroundings as the military enjoyed during the war.


The benefits of Lambertsen’s expertise – and further research he would conduct for decades while on Penn's medical faculty – now stretch far beyond the deep, both to the heavens and to many earthbound medical settings. He served on NASA panels during the early years of space flight, working to make astronauts’ breathing systems safer. He also became a leader in developing hyperbaric oxygen therapy, widely used as a treatment for the diving-related disorder known as the bends – where rapid changes in water and air pressure can cause severe sickness or death – as well as more recent applications such as the treatment of hospital patients with wounds that do not heal.


After Lambertsen died in 2011, at age 93, members of the intelligence, military and recreational communities were all present as his ashes were scattered on the waters off Key West – honoring a man whose vision had revolutionized mankind’s relationship with the undersea world.
 
What do you expect from a journalist these days, research and a polished article? I don't, anymore.


A lot better obit for an underwater pioneer.
US Navy SEAL's / Naval Special Warfare - The Book
March 28, 2013 ·

RIP Major / Dr. Christian J. Lambertsen: Inventor of the Lambertsen rebreather, combat dive pioneer, OSS veteran, and “Father of the Frogmen.”

Someone once described the ideal OSS candidate as a Ph. D. who could win a bar fight. Major / Dr. Christian Lambertsen probably came as close to being the personification of that ideal as anyone ever did.

Major Lambertsen, a World War II combat diver from the Office of Strategic Services, “Father of the Frogmen,” and life-long medical scholar, conducted his final dive mission during a ceremony March 10 when his ashes were committed to the Atlantic Ocean. Lambersten passed on on Feb. 11, 2011 at the age of 93. His 70-year career is layered with scientific achievement, beginning in 1941 with his invention of the Lambertsen Amphibious Respiritory Unit (an advanced [for the time] closed-circuit underwater breathing apparatus, aka rebreather), with which he conducted the first closed-circuit oxygen rebreather course in the United States for the Office of Strategic Services maritime unit at the U.S. Naval Academy on 17 May 1943.

"When World War II broke out, everyone realized they needed people to be able to sneak in and blow up ships," said Maj. Trevor Hill, an Army Special Forces officer and the commander of the Special Forces Underwater Operations School in Key West. After the U.S. Navy turned down his invention, "Lambertsen brought [the LARU rebreather] to a meeting with the Office of Strategic Services… he got in a pool and demonstrated that he could breath underwater, without creating bubbles, which was mind-blowing at the time." Following this, the Navy reconsidered and not only utilized Lambertsen’s rebreather, but had him instruct the first Navy UDT personnel in its use. The U.S. Navy calls Lambertsen “The Father of the Frogmen.”

Lambertsen trained the operational swimmers for a newly created OSS maritime unit, and joined them as a direct-commission U.S. Army major following his medical school graduation -- where he was first in his class.

Lambertsen spent most of World War II as a member of the Pacific Fleet Underwater Demolition Team, leading numerous underwater missions in Burma to attach explosives to Japanese ships. He also served as his unit's medical officer.

Post war Lambertsen served as an instructor to Professor of Pharmacology with the Department of Pharmacology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He spent the 1950s concentrating on national research needs in undersea medicine. He again took an appointment as Professor of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 1962. He was also named Professor of Medicine in 1972 and Professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine in 1976. He was the founder and director of The Environmental Biomedical Stress Data Center at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Each of these appointments were held until his retirement in 1987. In 1985, he became Emeritus Distinguished Professor of Environmental Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

Before the Lambertsen lung, the USN had no need for the acronym SCUBA, which has since turned into a word.



Bob
 
Off topic, sorta.
If anyone reading this thread never heard of him,
and is inspired to do some additional reading on Dr Lambertsen, also make sure to look up "Swede Momson" and his "Momson Lung" that Submariners used to evacuate stricken submarines.

Chug
History Phreak.
 
Last edited:
OK, I'll play , I spy!!

I believe the title its self "a father of scuba diving" is that of Jacques Cousteau ? He was the one who introduced it successfully to the greater population and it had a profound impact on our quest for undersea exploration. He developed the Aqua lung scuba set. Is the reason why so many got into scuba diving in the first place.

Lambertsen was the "father of the frogmen" or SEALS. He was the pioneer in the development of the "re breather", among many of his accomplishments.

Just a minor glitch!

Frank G
 
More can be found at the link below.

http://www.nap.edu/read/13338/chapter/30#15
National Academies Press: OpenBook
Memorial Tributes Volume 16 (2012)
Chapter: CHRISTIAN J . LAMBERTSEN

In 1952, Dr. Lambertsen and a colleague wrote a paper for the National Academy of Sciences describing his “Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus,” which resulted in the acronym SCUBA.

A rebreather is a Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.

JYC developed the Aqua Lung is the father of recreational SCUBA diving. There was more than one pioneer in developing underwater breathing capabilities, but few are noted due to PR machine of JYC, among other reasons.



Bob
 
Last edited:
Makes no mention of Haldane's work with the Siebe Gorman Company, DSEA, or the 10th Flotilla Mas.

Lots of people were having very similar ideas a good few years prior to Lambertsen. He may arguably be responsible for American underwater operations but certainly not the inventor of the concept. That honour goes to the Italians.
 
More can be found at the link below.



A rebreather is a Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.

JYC developed the Aqua Lung is the father of recreational SCUBA diving. There was more than one pioneer in developing underwater breathing capabilities, but few are noted due to PR machine of JYC, among other reasons.



Bob

Ooops!!! I guess I stand corrected on this. I should have done a little research before playing I spy. I just verified this and I guess I was going with popular belief of the origin of "SCUBA".

I appreciate the correction and its always good to learn something new. There are a few pioneers that contributed to "SCUBA" but notably Lambertsen should undoubtedly be credited for this major contribution.

Frank G
 

Back
Top Bottom