English: American aquanaut and engineer Berry L. Cannon inside the SEALAB II underwater habitat at 205 feet depth off La Jolla, California, working on the headset of the helium pitch voice unscrambler. Cannon has electrodes on his head for medical monitoring. Dents in the chow mein noodle can under the bench are due to high pressure in the Sealab habitat. Cannon would later die of carbon dioxide poisoning during the SEALAB III project. From http://archives.starbulletin.com/2002/03/31/news/story5.html. Credited to Associated Press, but caption reads "Diver Berry Cannon is shown inside SeaLab in this U.S. Navy handout photo taken on Sept. 5, 1965." The photo was also published in the books Groups Under Stress, Living and Working in the Sea, and Challenge of the Seven Seas.
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2011-06-21 20:39 Gildir 432×339× (41334 bytes) From http://archives.starbulletin.com/2002/03/31/news/story5.html. Credited to Associated Press, but caption reads "Diver Berry Cannon is shown inside SeaLab in this U.S. Navy handout photo taken on Sept. 5, 1965. Photo by J.D. Skidmore, PHC, U.S. Navy"
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FILE--Diver Berry Cannon is shown inside Sealab in this U.S. Navy handout photo taken on Sept. 5, 1965. In the 1960s, the Navy sent teams of divers to live for weeks on the ocean floor in a small habitat known as SeaLab. It was a daring series of experiments, an effort that paralleled the nation's push to get a man on the moon, at a fraction of the cost and with little of the glamour. Cannon died trying to enter the habitat as he went down wearing equipment that did not have the chemical needed to remove carbon dioxide. SeaLab effectively ended with Cannon's death. (AP Photo/San Diego Union-Tribune/U.S. Navy)