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PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY THE COUSTEAU SOCIETY
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By David Beard, Executive Editor, Newsletters If it weren’t for a severe car accident that left him paralyzed on much of his right side, Jacques-Yves Cousteau would not have been swimming incessantly off southern France to recuperate.
If he hadn’t been swimming so much offshore, he wouldn’t have met and joined two expert divers to discover the wonders under the surface; wouldn’t have pushed to develop a breathing apparatus to see more; wouldn’t then have felt the responsibility of sharing those wonders with the world.
“Misfortune led to opportunity,” Liz Garbus, director of the new Nat Geo documentary film Becoming Cousteau, told me Friday. And Cousteau’s opportunity would become opportunity for us to view and take images of a previously hidden world.
That desire to share “led Cousteau and his collaborators to develop a camera with a waterproof housing. Boom. Underwater cinematography was revolutionized,” said Garbus. (Pictured above, Cousteau in 1970.)
Cousteau had a close association with National Geographic in his efforts to communicate the wonders—and the precariousness—of the world’s seas.
The following photos, never published before, were taken by Robert Goodman for Nat Geo in June 1963, when Cousteau, in an unprecedented operation, dropped an “underwater village” to the lower depths of the Red Sea. Five divers would live for a month in the underwater base to examine the long-term effects on humans.
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