Underwater
in sentence
415 examples of Underwater in a sentence
Remember, I didn't care when I heard that the Maldives could disappear
underwater.
And while they can hold their cabinet meetings
underwater
to send an SOS to the world, their country can keep existing only if their islands keep existing.
These are the gentle giants that I've had the pleasure of meeting face to face many times
underwater.
The problem happens when you go
underwater.
Two, they allow you to stay
underwater
longer.
What I want you to do now is imagine yourself 400 feet underwater, with all this high-tech gear on your back, you're in a remote reef off Papua, New Guinea, thousands of miles from the nearest recompression chamber, and you're completely surrounded by sharks.
So I went to Mexico and swam with dolphins
underwater.
And so his entire body really is
underwater.
From our early work on 4D printing, where we printed objects, dipped them underwater, and they transform, to our active auxetics that respond to temperature and sunlight, to our more recent work on active textiles that respond to body temperature and change porosity, to our rapid liquid printing work where we print inflatable structures that morph based on air pressure and go from one shape to another, or our self-assembly work where we dip objects underwater, they respond to wave energy and assemble themselves into precise objects like furniture.
As more than 40 percent of the world's population is living in coastal areas, as sea levels rise and as storms get worse and worse, we're going to be more and more
underwater.
So what we're proposing is to work with the forces of nature to build rather than destroy, and in my lab at MIT, we set up a wave tank, a big tank that's pumping waves, and we placed geometries
underwater.
And we flew there with these canvas bladders in our suitcases, we got sunburned because it was Boston winter, and then we filled them with sand and we placed them
underwater.
Large objects filled with sand, we'd place them underwater, they're just really simple geometries.
As a young magician, I was obsessed with Houdini and his
underwater
challenges.
So, I began, early on, competing against the other kids, seeing how long I could stay
underwater
while they went up and down to breathe, you know, five times, while I stayed under on one breath.
While I was breaking the record
underwater
for the first time, she was sifting through my Blackberry, checking all my messages.
And I did a dive down to 160 feet, which is basically the height of a 16 story building, and as I was coming up, I blacked out underwater, which is really dangerous; that's how you drown.
I spent the first five minutes
underwater
desperately trying to slow my heart rate down.
Since then, in the intervening 40 years, I've spent about 3,000 hours underwater, and 500 hours of that was in submersibles.
And with "The Abyss," I was putting together my love of
underwater
and diving with filmmaking.
I guess I became an
underwater
photographer and a photojournalist because I fell in love with the sea as a child.
And I wanted to tell stories about all the amazing things I was seeing underwater, incredible wildlife and interesting behaviors.
But more and more frequently these days I'm seeing terrible things
underwater
as well, things that I don't think most people realize.
I want people to see what's happening underwater, both the horror and the magic.
And because I'm an
underwater
photographer, I wanted to do this story from both above and below, to make pictures like this that show one of these little pups making its very first swim in the icy 29-degree water.
I thought this was going to be headline news in every media outlet, but it really wasn't, so I wanted to do a story that was a very different kind of
underwater
story.
For example, these fish predate on sea urchins, and when the fish were all gone, all anyone ever saw
underwater
was just acres and acres of sea urchins.
In the northern part of New Zealand, I dove in the blue water, where the water's a little warmer, and photographed animals like this giant sting ray swimming through an
underwater
canyon.
I became an
underwater
photographer because I fell in love with the sea, and I make pictures of it today because I want to protect it, and I don't think it's too late.
I'm going to try to take you on a journey of the
underwater
acoustic world of whales and dolphins.
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