Marine Biologist Riley Elliott testing the suit out with a sandbar and galapago sharks. SCIENTISTS have unveiled a new wetsuit which acts as an INVISIBILTY cloak to fish which allows humans to interact with some of nature’s most fearsome seabeasts. Pictures show a diver, wearing the HECS Stealth wetsuit, swimming alongside potentially deadly tiger sharks, poisonous stingrays, and schools of normally weary fish. Other images demonstrate just how research-hungry scientists and thrill-seeking tourists can study and interact with huge turtles and lobsters. Vice President of Product Development at
Marine Biologist Riley Elliott testing the suit out with a sandbar and galapago sharks. SCIENTISTS have unveiled a new wetsuit which acts as an INVISIBILTY cloak to fish which allows humans to interact with some of nature’s most fearsome seabeasts. Pictures show a diver, wearing the HECS Stealth wetsuit, swimming alongside potentially deadly tiger sharks, poisonous stingrays, and schools of normally weary fish. Other images demonstrate just how research-hungry scientists and thrill-seeking tourists can study and interact with huge turtles and lobsters. Vice President of Product Development at the company which developed the revolutionary wetsuit, Warren Bird of HECS Aquatics explained just how shielding this energy helps divers to get closer to underwater marine life than ever before.
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Photo credit: © Media Drum World / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
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Keywords: cool, dangerous, dive, galapago, sandbar, shark, swim, underwater, wetsuit