Podcasts about women divers hall

  • 8PODCASTS
  • 14EPISODES
  • 1h 32mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Jan 17, 2021LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about women divers hall

Latest podcast episodes about women divers hall

Kōrero EAG - Start Local, Go Global
Kōrero EAG, S2, E11 - Cristina Zenato

Kōrero EAG - Start Local, Go Global

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2021 0:30


Cristina Zenato, a professional diver since 1994, Cristina is an ocean and cave explorer, a shark behaviorist, photographer, speaker, writer, and conservationist.Cristina believes in the power of education and uses her writing and speaking to empower women, inspire younger generations, and teach about conservation. Cristina is a member of the Explorers Club, The Women Divers Hall of Fame, and Ocean Artists Society, and she is the founder of the nonprofit People of the Water.

Surface Interval - The Dive Line Podcast
Cristina Zenato Joins us on Surface Interval 22 Shark Listener, Cave Diver, Conservationist, Explorer & Educator!

Surface Interval - The Dive Line Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2020 72:01


Ep22 Inspiring Cristina Zenato, Shark Listener, Cave Diver, Conservationist, Explorer & Educator! Ep22 Cristina Zenato, Shark Listener, Cave Diver, Conservationist, Explorer, Educator & Inspiring!In this episode Jim goes solo again and speaks with the truly inspiring Cristina Zenato, a chilled and relaxed chat we find out more about how she ended up in the Bahamas by accident and never went there for the sharks but soon found she had a gift with them, over theyears they have become 'her Sharks' , they all have names and personalities, find out about grandma, stumpy, crook, Vulcan, Trek and Black Spot who only goes to see Cristina for help!Cristina is a true ambassador for the Oceans and its inhabitants but especially the sharks not just in the Bahamas where Cristina lives but all across the world, changing perceptions of these magnificent creatures!We found out how they seek her attention and interaction and sees herself as a Shark Listener not a Shark Whisperer, how she still after 25-26 years of study, observation and research on these beautiful animals and after removing over 300 hooks from them , that she is still criticised for touching them! Cristina is creating a positive awareness of Sharks worlwide and has been inducted into the Women Divers Hall of Fame for the years of dedication, research and study on Sharks!Jim really enjoyed this chat and was in awe of everything she has achieved, listen to the guardian of the ocean tell you just a very small part of her story so faryou can even find out hoe to go on a Shark Handling Course and dive one on one with Cristina, Jim is Signed up already!!please consider subscribing this is the best way to support us and you get all our existing content and new content as its released

Podcast on Crimes Against Women
Episode 4 - Aquatic Abuse Homicide

Podcast on Crimes Against Women

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2020 42:52


Andrea Zaferes is a medicolegal death investigator who specializes in the handling of aquatic cases from the crime scene to the courtroom. Recognized in multiple jurisdictions and by the U.S. Army as an expert witness in bodies-found-in-water and aquatic death investigations, Zaferes has trained dive teams, law enforcement, medical examiners, and many others for over 30 years. A member of the Women Divers Hall of Fame, Andrea is also an author, public speaker, and a regular presenter at the Conference on Crimes Against Women. This episode focuses on Aquatic Abuse Homicide– cases that often appear at first as tragic accidents, aquatic homicide is a pattern of homicidal activity that occurs more often than one might realize. Today, aquatic homicide is a well-honed field of investigation that requires both specific training and crime scene methodology. Content warnings for this episode include: Physical violence, child abuse, sexual violence, drug/alcohol abuse, suicide/self-harm.

Profiles in Leadership
Interview with Dr. Darlene Iskra

Profiles in Leadership

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2020 45:20


Imagine being the first at something?  Dr. Darlene Iskra was the first woman Commander of a ship in the US Navy!  She served in the US Navy for 21 years..  She was also one of the first woman officers to serve as a Diving Officer and she served on four different ships before taking command of the Rescue and Savage ship USS Opportune during Operation Desert Shield/Storm in December 1990. She has a Ph.D in Sociology and an MA in National Security and Strategic Studies from the Naval War College.  She was inducted into the Women Divers Hall of Fame in 2008 and the San Francisco State University Alumni Hall of Fame in 2009. 

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo
Al Otro Lado del Espejo #283-14-04-18

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2018 151:13


Programa #283 - Plan de Inmersiones o Briefing VI Aniversario “in memoriam” de Jordi Mateo Rubio. Descubriremos el Sardine Run, una montaña rusa de increíbles sensaciones… con Aqua Wild Africa y Daniele Pavan. Nueva entrega del Women Divers Hall of Fame, Tanya Streeter, en la voz de Joanna Frisuelos. Mis amigos los peces, la inmersión semanal en la biología marina de la Escuela de Buceo Zoea de Madrid, con por Inés García. Cita con los 11º Encuentros Blue Drinks Murcia, con Alicia Prieto. La Conjura de los Pecios, el espacio de arqueología sumergida de patrimoniosubacuatico.net y Lucas Sáez. Proa al Viento, con la patrullera del SEMAR para acompañarles en sus misiones en el mar, con el Sargento Román Revilla. Efemerides y Agenda de propuestas hasta una nueva inmersión en las ondas. La Foto de la semana es una perspectiva desde el cabo de fondeo durante la parada de seguridad, cortesía de Sam Soffes https://unsplash.com/@soffes

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo
Al Otro Lado del Espejo #283-14-04-18

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2018 151:13


Programa #283 - Plan de Inmersiones o Briefing VI Aniversario “in memoriam” de Jordi Mateo Rubio. Descubriremos el Sardine Run, una montaña rusa de increíbles sensaciones… con Aqua Wild Africa y Daniele Pavan. Nueva entrega del Women Divers Hall of Fame, Tanya Streeter, en la voz de Joanna Frisuelos. Mis amigos los peces, la inmersión semanal en la biología marina de la Escuela de Buceo Zoea de Madrid, con por Inés García. Cita con los 11º Encuentros Blue Drinks Murcia, con Alicia Prieto. La Conjura de los Pecios, el espacio de arqueología sumergida de patrimoniosubacuatico.net y Lucas Sáez. Proa al Viento, con la patrullera del SEMAR para acompañarles en sus misiones en el mar, con el Sargento Román Revilla. Efemerides y Agenda de propuestas hasta una nueva inmersión en las ondas. La Foto de la semana es una perspectiva desde el cabo de fondeo durante la parada de seguridad, cortesía de Sam Soffes https://unsplash.com/@soffes

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo
Al Otro Lado del Espejo #282-07-04-18

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2018 137:30


Programa #282 - Plan de Inmersiones en las ondas Saltaremos al agua con la bióloga marina Inés García, en su espacio ¡Mis Amigos los Peces!... Pondremos una de piratas… ¡La Conjura de los Pecios!, el espacio de arqueología sumergida de Lucas Sáez… Protegeremos las Maravillas del Mar, escuchando y charlando con Mónica Alonso... Visitaremos el Women Divers Hall of Fame, en esta ocasión con Lotte Hass… Le daremos un repaso al #39 Encuentro Blue Drinks Madrid, con la Dra. Mercedes Varela… Sumaremos a la conversación a Océano Alfa, para presentar un nuevo espacio sobre Reservas Marinas, con Gloria Delgado… e invitaremos a sumarse a la tertulia al Catedrático en el Departamento de Ciencias del Mar y Biología Aplicada por la Universidad de Alicante, Alfonso Angel Ramos Esplá... https://imem.ua.es/es/quienes-somos/alfonso-angel-ramos-espla.html Repasaremos nuestras Efemerides y la Agenda de propuestas para el finde y la semana próxima, hasta un nuevo encuentro en las ondas... La foto de la semana es un espectacular ambiente de gorgonias rojas con Sergi Navarro como buceador modelo, cortesía del fotógrafo Stephane Sandon

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo
Al Otro Lado del Espejo #282-07-04-18

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2018 137:30


Programa #282 - Plan de Inmersiones en las ondas Saltaremos al agua con la bióloga marina Inés García, en su espacio ¡Mis Amigos los Peces!... Pondremos una de piratas… ¡La Conjura de los Pecios!, el espacio de arqueología sumergida de Lucas Sáez… Protegeremos las Maravillas del Mar, escuchando y charlando con Mónica Alonso... Visitaremos el Women Divers Hall of Fame, en esta ocasión con Lotte Hass… Le daremos un repaso al #39 Encuentro Blue Drinks Madrid, con la Dra. Mercedes Varela… Sumaremos a la conversación a Océano Alfa, para presentar un nuevo espacio sobre Reservas Marinas, con Gloria Delgado… e invitaremos a sumarse a la tertulia al Catedrático en el Departamento de Ciencias del Mar y Biología Aplicada por la Universidad de Alicante, Alfonso Angel Ramos Esplá... https://imem.ua.es/es/quienes-somos/alfonso-angel-ramos-espla.html Repasaremos nuestras Efemerides y la Agenda de propuestas para el finde y la semana próxima, hasta un nuevo encuentro en las ondas... La foto de la semana es un espectacular ambiente de gorgonias rojas con Sergi Navarro como buceador modelo, cortesía del fotógrafo Stephane Sandon

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo
Al Otro Lado del Espejo #281-31-03-18

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2018 158:10


Programa #281 - Plan de Inmersiones en las Ondas ¿Cual es tu destino esta Semana Santa en el Mar?, charlamos con César Jiménez desde La Paz, Baja California Sur… Lucas Sáez nos traerá el espacio de arqueología sumergida, La Conjura de los Pecios… Inés García nos llevará de la mano en la inmersión biológica de la semana con su espacio, Mis Amigos los Peces… Tercera entrega del Women Divers Hall of Fame, presentamos a la Doctora Jolie Bookspan… Conexión con la patrullera del SEMAR de la Guarcia Civil, hablamos del mar con su patrón, el Sargento Román Revilla, lo hemos titulado... Proa al Viento… Descubriremos la iniciativa Sanamares, para sensibilizar y colaborar con organizaciones para la recuperación de la vida marina, hablamos con Estíbaliz Parra… Con el director de DAN para España, Ramón Verdaguer, hablaremos de Seguridad en el Buceo y del Primer Scuba Diving Safety Global Meeting con Balkysub en Cabo de Palos… Y con nuestras Efemérides y Agenda de propuestas nos despediremos del mar… La foto de la semana es una instantánea del SS Tristan, un pecio identificado en agosto de 2017, y que se hundío al contacto con una mina en 1943 en el Mar Báltico oriental frente a Lituania, el pecio se encuentra a una profundidad máxima de 56 metros y la foto es cortesía de nuestra amiga Sabine Kerkau.

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo
Al Otro Lado del Espejo #281-31-03-18

Podcast Al otro lado del espejo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2018 158:10


Programa #281 - Plan de Inmersiones en las Ondas ¿Cual es tu destino esta Semana Santa en el Mar?, charlamos con César Jiménez desde La Paz, Baja California Sur… Lucas Sáez nos traerá el espacio de arqueología sumergida, La Conjura de los Pecios… Inés García nos llevará de la mano en la inmersión biológica de la semana con su espacio, Mis Amigos los Peces… Tercera entrega del Women Divers Hall of Fame, presentamos a la Doctora Jolie Bookspan… Conexión con la patrullera del SEMAR de la Guarcia Civil, hablamos del mar con su patrón, el Sargento Román Revilla, lo hemos titulado... Proa al Viento… Descubriremos la iniciativa Sanamares, para sensibilizar y colaborar con organizaciones para la recuperación de la vida marina, hablamos con Estíbaliz Parra… Con el director de DAN para España, Ramón Verdaguer, hablaremos de Seguridad en el Buceo y del Primer Scuba Diving Safety Global Meeting con Balkysub en Cabo de Palos… Y con nuestras Efemérides y Agenda de propuestas nos despediremos del mar… La foto de la semana es una instantánea del SS Tristan, un pecio identificado en agosto de 2017, y que se hundío al contacto con una mina en 1943 en el Mar Báltico oriental frente a Lituania, el pecio se encuentra a una profundidad máxima de 56 metros y la foto es cortesía de nuestra amiga Sabine Kerkau.

STEM-Talk
Episode 26: Richard Moon discusses deep-sea and high-altitude medicine

STEM-Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2016


Dr. Richard Moon had an unusual inspiration to practicing medicine: a television show, in black and white, entitled, “Medicine in the ‘60s.” He remembers being blown away by watching live surgeries performed on the show. This eventually led him to a career in the operating room—not as a surgeon, but an anesthesiologist. Like many STEM-Talk guests, Moon wears many hats. In addition to being a physician, he is a renowned researcher in the hyperbaric and diving medicine. He is currently a professor of anesthesiology and medicine at Duke University, and the Medical Director of Duke’s Center for Hyperbaric Medicine and Environmental Physiology. http://anesthesiology.duke.edu/?page_id=828766 In this episode, Host Dawn Kernagis, herself a rising research scientist in undersea medicine, as well as a highly experienced diver—earlier this year, she was inducted to the Women Divers Hall of Fame—talks with Moon, one of her mentors. Dawn met Moon when she participated in one of his research projects as a diver, and she went to him with research ideas as a potential research intern. She eventually became one of his graduate students at Duke University. In this lively and informative mentor-mentee discussion, Dawn and Moon talk about the history of hyperbaric medicine, including the establishment of Duke’s world-renowned Center for Hyperbaric Medicine and Environmental Physiology. They talk about medical conditions that can occur in deep sea diving, such as high pressure nervous syndrome and immersion pulmonary edema, as well as high-altitude sickness. Moon shares insights about his experiments in both high altitude and deep sea medicine, as well as his own expedition in climbing Mount Everest. Check out Moon’s home page at Duke: http://anesthesiology.duke.edu/?portfolio=richard-moon-md ; as well as his lecture at IHMC last January: “From the Ocean Depths to the Mountain Tops: How Do Humans Adapt?” http://www.ihmc.us/lectures/20160121/ 00:15: Dawn introduces Ken and describes Moon as a world-renowned physician and researcher who works in hyperbaric and diving medicine. 00:40: Dawn says she was “very lucky to have Dr. Moon as a mentor.” She participated in his research projects, as a diver. She then went to him with research ideas, and he accepted her as a graduate student, and he’s been a mentor and colleague ever since. 1:45: Ken reads a five-star iTunes review from “GTG2010” called “Exploding Kid:” “Dear STEM-Talk, I like your show. The super telescope looking at asteroids is cool. I like it so much I’m going to explode. Love, Griffin, age 6.” 2:38: Dawn runs through Moon’s bio. He holds an M.D. and a C.M. from McGill University in Canada, and a Master’s degree in biomedical engineering from the University of Toronto. He is a member of the Royal College of Physicians of Canada, as well as the American Board of Internal Medicine. He has authored hundreds of peer-reviewed publications. 3:48: Dawn welcomes Moon to the podcast. 4:06: Moon describes what sparked his interest in medicine when he was in high school. He watched a television show, in black and white, called “Medicine in the ‘60s.” “It showed operations. It was mind-blowing, so I decided that I had to go into medicine.” 4:49: In medical school, Moon’s first interest was in pulmonary medicine—simply because in the first-year lecture series on organ systems, the one on the pulmonary system was the best. Yet, he felt compelled to do something different and took a couple of years off to study biomedical engineering. 6:20: Moon went to Duke University with a fellowship in pulmonary medicine as well as an opportunity to undergo scientific training in diving physiology. One of his mentors, Enrico Camporesi, encouraged him to go into anesthesiology. 7:20: “Eventually he [Camporesi] won me over. That’s where I am today.” 7:46: Moon’s interest in diving physiology initially came from the television program “Sea Hunt.

International Women In Film
12_MicheleHall_UnderwaterFilmProducer_EmmyWinningImax_International Women In Film with Michele the Trainer

International Women In Film

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2016 42:02


Episode 12 Michele Hall Michele Hall is an Emmy Winning natural history and underwater film producer specializing in marine wildlife and marine conservation films for TV and IMAX since 1991. She is a member of the Television Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Women Divers Hall of Fame. After nearly 2 decades as a pediatric nurse, Michele entered the field of documentary filmmaking in 1991, specializing in marine still photography and marine wildlife films. While her underwater still photos have been published internationally, the focus of her work has been working as a team with her husband, Howard, producing marine wildlife documentary films for television and theatrical release.  She has produced or co-produced many television films including a National Geographic Special, two episodes of the PBS series Nature (one of which featured her and her team on-camera) and the five-hour PBS series Secrets of the Ocean Realm.  These television films garnered seven Emmy Awards, and numerous other wildlife film festival awards. The Halls are perhaps best known for their underwater IMAXÒ films.  In 1994 Michele was Location Manager on the first-ever underwater IMAX 3D feature, Into the Deep (which Howard directed), and in 1998 she produced the IMAX film Island of the Sharks (also directed by Howard).  In 2005 Michele returned to the IMAX 3D format for the Warner Bros. / IMAX feature Deep Sea 3D.  The award-winning sequel Under the Sea 3D followed in 2009. Howard and Michele have participated in other underwater IMAX productions in various capacities, including MacGillivray Freeman Films’ IMAX film Coral Reef Adventure, released in 2003.  More recently she has lent her expertise as a Producer to several IMAX features as Location Manager, including MacGillivray Freeman Films Journey to the South Pacific and Humpback Whales, and National Geographic’s Ocean Giants. Michele has strived to make family-friendly films that raise awareness of and increase appreciation for the marine environment.  During the past 25 years, the films she has produced have been seen by thousands of children and adults.  She has received positive feedback in letters, emails and in person from many who have said that not only have her films increased their knowledge of the marine environment, but they have also been the inspiration to turn their career choices toward marine sciences and / or environmental issues. In 2003 Michele and Howard were named Divers of the Year by the Boston Sea Rovers, and in 2011 they received the same accolade at Beneath the Sea.  That same year they were also inducted into the International Scuba Diving Hall of Fame.  In 2004 Michele and Howard were recognized by PADI with the PADI Environmental Award.  In 2013 they received the International Wildlife Film Festival’s Lifetime Achievement Award for Marine Conservation & Media.  In 2015 they were recognized by the Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival with the Outstanding Achievement Award for Natural History Filmmaking. Michele is a member of the Television Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Women Divers Hall of Fame, and is a recipient of the Academy of Underwater Arts and Sciences NOGI Award. http://www.howardhall.com/ __ International Women in Film Podcast http://InternationalWomenInFilm.com/ To join the International Women in Film Podcast Community https://michelethetrainer.leadpages.co/podcast-iwif-1/

STEM-Talk
Episode 19: Dr. Dawn Kernagis talks about life undersea during NASA’s NEEMO-21 Mission

STEM-Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2016


For this special episode of STEM-Talk, IHMC Research Scientist and STEM-Talk Host Dawn Kernagis sits on the other side of the microphone. This summer, Dawn was one of six divers selected for NASA’s NEEMO (NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations) 21 mission, and we were able to talk to her live from the Aquarius Reef Base, located 62 feet below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. During the 16-day mission, Dawn and her colleagues performed field research designed to test operations and equipment for future space exploration. In particular, the international crew of aquanauts performed research both inside and outside the habitat. During simulated spacewalks carried out underwater, they evaluated tools and mission operation techniques that could be used in future space missions. Inside the habitat, the crew's objectives include testing a DNA sequencer, a medical telemetry device, and HoloLens operational performance for human spaceflight cargo transfer. In many ways, the NEEMO mission crystalizes Dawn’s career. Her research expertise has been focused on human performance, risk mitigation and resilience in extreme environments—namely undersea and in space. In addition to her accomplishments as a scientist, Dawn is also a long-standing diver, and this year was inducted into the Women Divers Hall of Fame. Conducting the interview is IHMC Senior Research Scientist and former NASA astronaut Tom Jones. Dawn shares aspects of her daily life in the undersea habitat, from eating freeze dried food to watching thousands of fish from the galley window every night before bed. She also delves into the research that she conducted, which included testing a mini DNA sequencer and deep water dives to collect samples of several coral species and weighted walks on the ocean floor to simulate space walks. STEM-Talk’s Billy Howell and Jason Conrad, key players in the production of each episode, also join the impromptu conversation with “fanboy” questions for Dawn. Dawn kept a blog about her experience, which you can read at: http://www.ihmc.us/blog/neemo 2:00: Dawn discussed her experience as manager for the world record-breaking diving exploration project Wakulla Springs. 2:24: On her induction, last April, into the Women Divers Hall of Fame, she said, “It was cool to be sitting with women I have looked up to since I was a little girl.” 3:23: Dawn described certain challenges faced by people working in extreme environments such as Navy divers, deep sea divers and astronauts: decompression sickness, oxygen toxicity and nitrogen narcosis. 5:02: Ken Ford read a 5-star iTunes review (which are piling up): “The best podcast. It is as if the double secret selection committee has hacked my Google search. Keep up the great work, team.” 5:37: Tom Jones explained that the NEEMO mission, now in its 15th year, is an analog to deep space expedition. 6:09: Dawn said her voice sounded high because of the increase in air density in her undersea habitat. 7:14: Dawn explained that for the in-water work, they gear up and jump out of the habitat in hard hat diving supplies. “There is constant communication with the habitat,” she says. 9:30: “It makes such a difference to have a great team.” 9:50: “The nice thing is we have support divers who bring supplies up and down on a daily basis. It is not as isolated as space expeditions.” 10:50: Dawn described some of the physiological effects of being at a pressure of 3 atmospheres and 62 feet deep: “I can’t whistle; I have a high voice; we can feel swells pick up overhead—the pressure changes, so our ears are constantly popping. We’re hungry all the time.” 12:12: They performed simulated space walks to identify different species of coral for the Florida International University marine sciences team. 13:25: They used geology sample tools and water-resistant iPads. 14:20: They tested medical telemetry equipment (like min...

NAUI Dive Team Report.
Police Officer by Day & Scuba Instructor by Night

NAUI Dive Team Report.

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2016 9:15


Tune in as we chat with Regina Bier, a member of the Women Divers Hall of Fame, an Ohio police officer, and Dive Instructor about her career in the law enforcement (for 25 years) and as a Dive Instructor (for 28). “I’ve always just juggled the two jobs, and it takes a lot of time sacrifice to keep them both going…. I don’t look at myself as a woman amongst a bunch of men; I look at myself as, ‘I’m here and I’m a diver.’ …A commitment I made when I became an instructor in diving…I made a personal commitment to myself to stay in top-notch shape in my physical and mental health so I could be a role model.”