MB5005 - Scientific Diving and Diving Physiology
Credit points: | 03 |
Year: | 2009 |
Student Contribution Band: | Band 4 |
Administered by: | School of Marine & Tropical Biology |
Available ONLY to students enrolled in GCertSc, GDipSc, GDipResMeth, MAppSc. Students must pass a swim test, dive medical (AS2299 Standard), PADI Open Water Diver (or equivalent), show proof of number of dives completed.
A two-week intensive subject on diving physiology of marine mammals and practical training in the skills required for certification as a scientific diver. Topics discussed will include diving physics, diving physiology (eg seals, penguins, whales), use of dive tables, boat handling, underwater navigation and dive-related first aid. Practical skills developed will include rescue skills, safe deep and multi-level diving procedures, boat handling, radio procedures, knot tying, compressor operation and maintenance and SCUBA equipment maintenance. Students successfully completing the subject will be certified as scientific divers with endorsements depending on past experience.
Learning Outcomes
- to gain certification as a scientific diver;
- to gain practical skills in boat handling, radio procedures, compressor operation and maintenance, SCUBA equipment maintenance, knot tying;
- to gain practical skills in rescue operations, first aid;
- to understand how SCUBA diving impacts human physiological processes and how to avert the types of health problems that can arise;
- to understand how to plan deep and multi-level dive profiles for designing safe research diving programs;
- to understand physiological mechanisms and specialisations used by marine mammals to accomplish deep and prolonged diving.
Assumed Knowledge: | Students enrolling in this subject should have an undergraduate degree in a relevant discipline (eg biology or environmental science) or have acquired equivalent knowledge through other study. They should have an excellent understanding of science subjects, particularly physiology, ecology and biostatistics. Students must have at least 30 hours of diving experience as Rescue Divers, plus a current First Aid and Oxygen certificate. |
Availabilities | |
Townsville, Block, Study Period 10 | |
Census Date 11-Dec-2009 | |
Face to face teaching 23-Nov-2009 to 07-Dec-2009 | |
Coord/Lect: | Professor Michael Kingsford. |
Contact hours: |
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Assessment: | quizzes or tests (20%); presentations (20%); practical pool and open water diving tests (30%); (30%); essays (30%). |
Note: Minor variations might occur due to the continuous Subject quality improvement process, and in case of minor variation(s) in assessment details, the Subject Outline represents the latest official information.