If you were given the chance, how about living underwater? Well, once a man broke the record of living under water for more than 70 days. According to news reports, a professor at the University of Florida recently broke a world record by living more than 74 days underwater without fainting. Asked if he now plans to resume after breaking the record, he shares his thoughts and says that he loves being under the sea and has no plans to resume anytime soon.
According to reports, Joseph Dituri went underwater on March 1 and stayed at Jules’ Undersea Lodge, located at the bottom of a 30-meter lake in Key Largo.
Jules’ Undersea Lodge is a Florida vacation home for everyone. According to reports, the previous record was 73 days, 2 hours and 34 minutes, which was set by two Tennessee professors, Bruce Cantrell and Jessica Fain, in the same pavilion in 2014.
Dituri, also known as Dr. Deep Sea, experiencing normal life underwater. He eats a protein-rich diet of eggs and salmon prepared using a microwave oven, exercises and exercises, exercises daily and sleeps for an hour, the report added.
Although he has already set the world record, Dituri plans to stay at the resort until June 9, when he will complete 100 days underwater, an underwater mission called Project Neptune 100.
Dituri’s mission, the Neptune 100, is said to conduct ocean health research and educational programs organized by the Marine Resources Development Foundation, which has a habitat. After spending more than 74 days underwater, the professor added that the record was a small bump and he was truly grateful for it.
His research includes daily research in physiology to analyze how the human body reacts to long-term stress. He added that the idea here is to replenish the oceans of the world, take care of them by living there and treat them well.
Dituri’s future work includes conducting online classes and interviews from his underwater digital agency. During all those days underwater, he reached more than 2,500 students through online marine science courses and other materials in his biomedical engineering class at the University of South Florida.
Although he says he loves living under the sea, there is one thing he really misses about being above, and that is definitely the sun.