Skydiving Fatalities :: About Sky Diving
Skydiving Fatalities

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NAKED SKY DIVING DEATH SKY DIVING ACCIDENT SKYDIVING CRASH CHUTE DOESNT OPEN

22 Jan 2012 at 9:17pm


Near-death skydiving/parachuting incident

23 Apr 2011 at 6:59am


Skydiving Death [of a canopy]

23 Jun 2010 at 1:32am





Skydiving Fatalities

Profile Of A Skydiving Accident

Many misconceptions surround the skydiving accident. Causes, the people who are most likely to experience them, and the likelihood of being killed while skydiving are often wrongly perceived.


A skydiving accident can be caused by a variety of factors, but some more common causes include collisions between jumpers, difficulty during landing, and malfunctioning equipment. Despite the prevalent myth that equipment problems are the biggest culprits for causing accidents, operator error is actually the root cause the majority of the time.


Collisions are often the result of parachute canopies deploying too close together. Many landing difficulties are attributable to skydivers overestimating how much time they have to complete turns and other maneuvers, or landing near obstacles. A few landing fatalities involve drowning related to landing in water. Equipment malfunctions rarely involve failure of the parachute or reserve to deploy, as may be a common belief, but more often involve lines that become entangled.


Another misconception about a skydiving accident may be that novices are most often the victims of accidents, but students are actually rarely involved in accidents. More experienced jumpers who try maneuvers requiring a high level of skill are more likely to experience a parachuting accident. Accidents took the lives of 21 people in 2004, down from 25 in 2003, 33 in 2002, and 35 in 2001, some of which may have did a jump without parachute.


A comparison of the statistics regarding Skydiving Fatalities with fatality statistics from sports that may be considered less risky, such as scuba diving, shows that parachuting actually poses less of a risk than most people perceive. For example, according to reports, approximately 30 out of 100, 000 skydiving participants are killed in the United States each year. This rate compares to 47 out of 100, 000 for scuba diving, 50 out 100, 000 for mountain climbing, and 67 out of 100, 000 for hot air ballooning. So don t let safety fears scare you from making that first skydive.



On an interesting note, history includes a few cases of people who have survived a jump without parachute from very high altitudes. Some notable survivors of these jumps were airmen from World War II. One fighter pilot was forced to jump from his bomber plane when it came under enemy fire in France. He fell 20, 000 feet, crashed through a skylight on the roof of a train station, sustained severe injuries, and eventually recovered. Other scenarios involved airmen leaving their planes for the same reason and falling anywhere from 18, 000 to 22, 000 feet and surviving because their fall was broken by trees and snow drifts.

By: John Ewing -

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

John Ewing is a syndicated columnist of www.skydiving-parachuting-guide.com . With tips for first time jumpers and skydiving lessons


Anyone hear of a skydiving fatality in Arizona within the last 2-3 days?
We just got news a very good friend was killed skydiving in Arizona. I can't find anything on the Web.

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Are skydiving deaths typically caused by faulty parachutes?
I heard that there are hundreds of thousands of skydives conducted per year (in the United States) but on average there are 30 skydiving fatalities each year in the US. I was just wondering if these deaths could've usually been prevented by better equipment (namely, parachutes that ALWAYS open)... or were there other causes? A few days after I rode a famous, popular rollercoaster, there was a news report about a woman who rode that very same rollercoaster and had an aneurysm, dying immediately whilst in the rollercoaster. Was the speed unbearable for her? Is that what brought on the aneurysm? Could someone also have an aneurysm mid-air after skydiving for the same reason? Skydiving is on my bucket list (I'm NOT dying, though!!) because everyone says there's nothing like it and it's the most exhilarating experience in the world. I just want to make sure nothing goes wrong. The first time I skydive I want it to be tandem and I don't want there to be any "cool tricks" that might make me want to throw up, so I really just want my first time to be the tamest possible type of skydiving there is.

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Sky Diving Death During Vactation! [HD]

24 Jun 2011 at 5:08pm



Next page: 93 Year Old + Sky Diving + Arizona


Skydiving Fatalities News


Teen hurt: skydiving club liable - Independent Online

21 May 2012 at 8:38am  The Witbank Skydiving Club is liable for the damages suffered by a then 17-year-old who fractured her leg and injured her back when she completed a static line first skydiving jump without the permission of her parents. Euleine de Kock, now 21, is claiming ...

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More fun than a barrel of ? horses? - Belleville Intelligencer

21 May 2012 at 5:32am  She?s been riding for five years and showing for three. It?s her second year of barrel racing. ?To me it?s like skydiving. The adrenaline gets going.? The technique requires both rider and horse to do several things within a few seconds.

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Chris Colwell inspires at TedXDubai 2011 - The National

18 May 2012 at 11:33am  Chris Colwell spoke movingly on Saturday about how he had adjusted to a new life after a skydiving accident left him a quadriplegic. Mr Colwell talked of his struggles to regain his self-reliance and of the videos he posted on YouTube in the hope of ...

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