Pyle stop
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pyle_stop
A Pyle stop is a type of short, optional deep decompression stop performed by scuba divers at depths well below the first decompression stop mandated by a conventional dissolved phase decompression algorithm, such as the US Navy or Bühlmann decompression algorithms. They were named after Richard Pyle, an American ichthyologist from Hawaii, who found that they prevented his post-dive fatigue symptoms after deep dives to collect fish specimens. The ascent pattern has become known as Pyle stops, or "deep stops" since the late 1990s.
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Pyle stop
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Richard L. Pyle On Boat in Philippines, with Poseidon SE7EN Rebreather
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Richard Pyle preparing for deep dive with rebreather in Hawaii
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--01-17
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(Richard L. Pyle On Boat in Philippines, with Poseidon SE7EN Rebreather. The photo was taken during a joint expedition with Bishop Museum and the California Academy of Sciences to survey Mesophotic Coral Ecosystems, May 2014.)
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Richard Pyle is the original user of what has become known as "Pyle Stops"
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Richard_L._Pyle_On_Boat_in_Philippines,_with_Poseidon_SE7EN_Rebreather.jpg
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A Pyle stop is a type of short, optional deep decompression stop performed by scuba divers at depths well below the first decompression stop mandated by a conventional dissolved phase decompression algorithm, such as the US Navy or Bühlmann decompression algorithms. They were named after Richard Pyle, an American ichthyologist from Hawaii, who found that they prevented his post-dive fatigue symptoms after deep dives to collect fish specimens. The ascent pattern has become known as Pyle stops, or "deep stops" since the late 1990s. These stops were developed by Pyle based on personal experience, and have had a significant influence on decompression theory and practice in the following years.
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