Artifacts References

I find this sort of material to be much more interesting than the endless rehashing of coral reefs, glowingly useless gear reviews, and "buoyancy tips" that fill up the standard glossy diving magazines.

Historical

Conservation ManualDonny L. Hamilton

The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea

The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea
Peter Kemp, 1988

Lots of interesting information and trivia.




The Perfect Storm

The Perfect Storm
Sebastian Junger, 1997

You saw the movie. The book is better.



Nautical

Two Years Before the Mast

Two Years Before the Mast
Richard Henry Dana Jr., 1869

Detailed and literate sailor's account of a voyage on a square-rigger around Cape Horn and back in the 1850's.

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Moby Dick

Moby Dick
Herman Melville, 1851

Really needs no introduction. If you thought it was awful in high school, give this one another try now. Its much better than you remember. The story may be fiction, but the technical details are quite accurate.

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Fictional

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
Jules Verne, 1870

Still fun to read, and infinitely better than any of the movie adaptations. Verne predicted scuba diving, submarines, and nuclear power in the 1860s!

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Other

Schooners and Schooner Barges

Schooners and Schooner Barges
Paul C Morris
Lower Cape Pub., 1984









Railroad Ferries of the Hudson

Railroad Ferries of the Hudson
Raymond Baxter, Arthur Adams
Fordham University Press., 1999








strobe light

Day or night, an inexpensive flashing strobe light hanging from the anchor chain will guide you home. At night, it may be the only thing that leads you back to the up-line, and even during the day, it is reassuring to look up and see it blinking in the distance. Under some conditions, it can relieve you of the need to use a wreck reel, something that any spearfisherman would appreciate.

In fact, the more strobe lights there are hanging from the anchor line, the better. The presence of your strobe light signals to other divers that you are still down. Don't get one of the miniature AA-powered models, get a big bright one that you can see from a distance through murky water. The tektite Strobe 300 (pictured) is the biggest and brightest model available, and probably the best for use in our murky waters.

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