James Stewart, a pioneering scuba diver who was
famous for exploring the sites of hydrogen bomb
blasts, besides teaching generations of scientists from
the Scripps Institute of Oceanography since the
1960s, has died.
Anyone reading Undercurrent through the '90s will recall his name popped up frequently, since he was
one of the few real go-to experts who had command
of the technical aspects of diving and the fun of sport
diving, and he was always willing to share his expertise.
He authored the original University Guide for
Diving Safety, which was used to create research diving
programs across California, and famously survived
a shark attack in 1961 off Wake Island in the North
Pacific when he was twice bitten by a gray reef shark
that cut two arteries. He was able to make it to a
Hawaiian hospital, where he made a full recovery.
Stewart also consulted for NASA, the FBI, Army
Special Forces and National Park Service, developing
diver training for the Antarctic, where he even had a
mountain named after him. He was 89.