List of diving environments by type
The diving environment is the natural or artificial surroundings in which an underwater dive is done. It is usually underwater, but professional diving is sometimes done in other liquids. Underwater diving is the human practice of voluntarily descending below the surface of the water to interact with the surroundings, for various recreational or occupational reasons. Some of the more common diving environments are listed and defined here.
Recreational dive sites
Recreational dive sites – Specific places that recreational divers go to enjoy the underwater environment or are used for training purposes
- Index of recreational dive sites – Alphabetical listing of popular places for underwater diving
- Inland dive sites – Dive sites in bodies of water other than the sea
- Coastal dive sites – Dive sites near a coast of the body of water
- Cave diving – Underwater diving in water-filled caves
- Coral reef – Outcrop of rock in the sea formed by the growth and deposit of stony coral skeletons
- Lake – large body of relatively still water
- Muck diving – Recreational diving on a loose sedimentary bottom
- Quarry dive sites – Disused and flooded quarry repurposed for underwater diving
- Rocky reef
- Wreck diving – Recreational diving on wrecks
Diver training sites
- Swimming pool – Artificial container filled with water intended for swimming
- Diver training tank – A container of water wide and deep enough to practice diving and underwater work skills, usually with a window through which the exercises can be viewed by the instructor
- Confined water – A diving environment that is enclosed and bounded sufficiently for safe training purposes. Generally implies that conditions are not affected by geographic or weather conditions, and that divers can not get lost
- Open water – Unrestricted water, generally with direct vertical access to the surface of the water in contact with the Earth's atmosphere
Hyperbaric treatment and transport environments
- Closed bell – A pressure vessel for human occupation which is lowered into the sea to the workplace, equalised in pressure to the environment, and opened to allow the divers in and out
- Hyperbaric stretcher – Portable pressure vessel to transport a person under pressure.
- Hyperbaric lifeboat – Lifeboat for transporting people under pressure
- In-water recompression – In-water treatment for decompression sickness
- Recompression chamber – A hyperbaric chamber used to treat divers suffering from decompression illness
Environments by confinement
- Confined water – A diving environment that is enclosed and bounded sufficiently for safe training purposes. Generally implies that conditions are not affected by geographic or weather conditions, and that divers can not get lost
- Confined space – A space with limited entry and egress and not suitable for human inhabitants
- Open water – Unrestricted water, generally with direct vertical access to the surface of the water in contact with the Earth's atmosphere
- Blue-water diving – Underwater diving in mid-water where the bottom is not visible and is out of diving range
- Black-water diving – Open ocean mid-water diving at night
- Penetration diving, also known as Overhead environments – Diving under a physical barrier to a direct vertical ascent to the surface
- Cave diving – Underwater diving in water-filled caves
- Cavern diving – Diving in the part of a cave where the exit is visible by natural light
- Ice diving – Underwater diving under ice
- Intake – An opening or structure through which a fluid is admitted to a space or machine
- Penstock – Intake structure that controls water flow to turbines or sewerage systems
- Overhang – A topographical feature which is open to one side, but obstructed overhead, and deep enough for a diver to be under the overhang.
- Swim-through – Arch, or short, clear tunnel that has sufficient space to allow a diver to swim through and where the opening at the far end is visible through the hole.
- Wreck diving – Recreational diving on wrecks
- Under ships – Maintenance and upkeep of ships
Environments by visibility
- Blue-water diving – Underwater diving in mid-water where the bottom is not visible and is out of diving range
- Low visibility diving
- Night diving – Underwater diving during the hours of darkness
- Black-water diving – Open ocean mid-water diving at night
- Silt out – Reduction of underwater visibility by disturbing silt deposits
Environments by hazard
- Benign water – Diving in environments of low risk, where it is extremely unlikely or impossible for the diver to get lost or entrapped, or be exposed to hazards other than the basic underwater environment
- Bomb disposal – Activity to dispose of and render safe explosive munitions and other materials
- Clearance diving – Military diving work involving underwater demolition and work with explosives
- Combat diving
- Contaminated water – Water containing high levels of hazardous materials
- Currents
- Delta P environments – List of the hazards to which an underwater diver may be exposed, their possible consequences and the common ways to manage the associated risk – Environments where a pressure difference causes flow. Usually refers to cases where the flow is likely to entrain and pull the diver into an enclosed space.
- Intakes from the body of water – An opening or structure through which a fluid is admitted to a space or machine
- Outlets
- Drains
- Penstock – Intake structure that controls water flow to turbines or sewerage systems
- Sluice gate – A movable gate allowing water to flow under it when opened
- Propeller – Device that transmits rotational power into linear thrust on a fluid
- Azimuth thruster – Steerable propulsion pod under a watercraft
- Manoeuvring thruster – Transverse or steerable propulsion device in a watercraft
- Hazmat diving – Underwater diving in a known hazardous materials environment
- Live-boat diving, also known as liveboat diving or live-boating – Diving from a boat which is under way (not moored) – Diving from a vessel which may have propellers or thrusters in gear during the dive.
- Nuclear diving – Diving in an environment where there is a risk of exposure to radioactive materials
- Penetration diving, also known as Overhead diving – Diving under a physical barrier to a direct vertical ascent to the surface
- Sewer diving – Diving for maintenance work in sewers
- Underwater demolition – The deliberate destruction or neutralization of man-made or natural underwater obstacles
Environments by temperature
- Diving in hot water – Water that is hot enough to require measures to keep the diver cool.
- Diving in warm water – Water at temperatures where no thermal protection is necessary.
- Diving in cold water – Water where heat loss is a critical hazard. Arbitrarily specified at below 10 °C for some training standards (Dive leader)
- Diving in freezing water – Water where surface layers are at or very near freezing point.
Environments by geography
- Tropical diving – Diving in tropical waters
- Temperate water diving – Diving in temperate waters
- Polar diving - Diving in polar waters
- Altitude diving – Underwater diving at altitudes above 300 m
- Cave diving – Underwater diving in water-filled caves
- Inland diving – Diving in waters inland of the coastal high water mark.
- Inshore diving – Diving in coastal territorial waters
- Offshore diving – Diving outside the territorial waters of a country
- Open ocean diving – Diving in deep water out of sight of land
Environments by topography
- Blue-water diving – Underwater diving in mid-water where the bottom is not visible and is out of diving range
- Cave – Natural underground space large enough for a human to enter
- Culvert – Structure that allows the passage of water or organisms under an obstruction
- Dam – A barrier that stops or restricts the flow of surface or underground streams
- Deep diving – Underwater diving to a depth beyond the norm accepted by the associated community
- Flooded mine
- Flooded quarries – Disused and flooded quarry repurposed for underwater diving
- Ice diving – Underwater diving under ice
- Lake – large body of relatively still water
- Mid-water – Away from any fixed solid reference points.
- Muck diving – Recreational diving on a loose sedimentary bottom
- Reef – A shoal of rock, coral or other sufficiently coherent material, lying beneath the surface of water
- Coral reef – Outcrop of rock in the sea formed by the growth and deposit of stony coral skeletons
- River – Natural flowing watercourse
- Reservoir – Storage space for fluids
- Sump – A low part of a volume that collects liquid by gravity
- Sump (cave) – A passage in a cave that is submerged under water
- Tunnel – An underground passage made for traffic
- Wall diving – Underwater diving alongside a near vertical face
- Water tank – Container for storing water
Environments by depth zone
- Shallow water, defined as between the surf-zone and the coast
- Intermediate water, defined as between the surf zone and wave base (where the waves just interact with the bottom and no more, usually about 80 m water depth with 10 second swells). The seafloor beneath intermediate water is termed the shoreface and is the zone where the seafloor slows down the swells by friction, so that the surf ends up being lower than it otherwise would be.
- Deep water, defined as deeper than wave base: i.e. too deep for waves to interact with the seafloor.
Recreational divers will usually dive in the shallow to intermediate marine environment. Technical and commercial divers may venture into the deep water environment.
Environments by professional activity
- Aquaculture – Farming of aquatic organisms
- Aquarium – Transparent tank of water for fish and water-dwelling species
- Archaeological sites – Place in which evidence of past activity is preserved
- Deep sea mining, also known as Underwater mining – Mineral extraction from the ocean floor
- Demolition – Tearing-down of buildings and other structures
- Dry dock – A narrow basin that can be sealed and pumped dry to allow work on a vessel
- Fish farms – Raising fish commercially in enclosures
- Forensic investigation
- Inspection – Organized examination or formal evaluation exercise
- Marine salvage – The process of recovering a ship or cargo after a shipwreck or other maritime casualty.
- Military – Organization primarily tasked with preparing for and conducting war
- Mooring – Any permanent structure to which a vessel may be secured
- Single buoy mooring, also known as Single point mooring – An offshore mooring buoy with connections for loading or unloading tankers
- Nuclear power plant – Thermal power station where the heat source is a nuclear reactor
- Oil rig – Apparatus constructed for oil drilling
- Oil platform, also known as Production platform – Large offshore structure with oil drilling and related facilities
- Public safety diving – Underwater work done by law enforcement, rescue and search and recovery teams
- Science – Systematic enterprise that builds and organizes knowledge
- Search and rescue – Search for and provision of aid to people who are in distress or imminent danger
- Sewage treatment – Process of removing contaminants from municipal wastewater
- Ships husbandry – Maintenance and upkeep of ships
- Submarine pipeline – A pipeline that is laid on the seabed or below it inside a trench
- Surveying – The technique, profession, and science of determining the positions of points and the distances and angles between them
- Training – Acquisition of knowledge, skills, and competencies as a result of teaching or practice
- Underwater construction – Industrial construction in an underwater environment
- Wellhead – Component at the surface of a well that provides the structural and pressure-containing interface
Diving medium
- Underwater environment – The aquatic or submarine environment
- Fresh water – naturally occurring water with low amounts of dissolved salts
- Potable water – water safe for consumption
- Seawater – Water from a sea or an ocean
- Brackish water – Water with salinity between freshwater and seawater
- Brine – A highly concentrated solution of a salt in water
- Contaminated water – Water containing high levels of hazardous materials
- Sewage – Wastewater that is produced by a community of people
- Fresh water – naturally occurring water with low amounts of dissolved salts
- Drilling fluid, also known as Drilling mud – Aid for drilling boreholes into the ground
- Petroleum, also known as Crude oil – Naturally occurring hydrocarbon liquid found underground
- Fuel oil – Petroleum product burned to generate power
Other
- Drift diving – Scuba diving where the diver is intentionally transported by the water flow
References
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