Tag: Stig Ã…vall Severinsen
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Five Weird Swimming Facts
Swimming has a history filled with tons of interesting, and maybe even weird, facts! Here are the five weirdest, jaw-dropping swimming facts. The swimming world seems magical when we look at these amazing yet weird facts. https://youtu.be/dxoL0Jk63kI
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Man holds his breath under ice water for 22 minutes | 60 Minutes Australia
Stig Severinsen can hold his breath for 22 minutes. He’s the world record holder but he’s not done yet. Now, Stig is using his unique powers to free dive in the most hostile of places. On 60 Minutes, watch as Stig swims the length of three Olympic swimming pools, under metre thick ice, in freezing…
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Stig Severinsen Swimming with Icebergs
Swimming inside an iceberg looks amazing because the ice looks like glass and that’s crazy, and because it kind of resembles an underwater version of Superman’s Fortress of Solitude. Or at least, like a crystal palace. National Geographic shows us how a free diver explores the ice cold waters below. See Sploid http://youtu.be/s5fysX2IQaA
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250 Feet Below 3 Feet of Ice In Speedos – Stig Severinsen Sets New Guinness World Record
Breaking news – Today on a single breath of air, Stig Severinsen sets a new official Guinness World Record by swimming 250 feet (76.2m) below the ice in a frozen lake in East Greenland. The previous Guinness World Record for the same stunt was 236 feet (set by Stig March 2010). Post by Stig Ã…vall Severinsen.
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Stig Severinsen – “The Man Who Doesn’t Breathe”
“Demonstrating extreme skill, incredible bravery and intense dedication, four-time, Danish World Champion freediver, Stig Ã…vall Severinsen, achieved a new Guinness World Record when he accomplished ‘the longest dive under ice’, on a single breath of air. Authenticating his lifelong passion for water and breath-holding, Stig pushed himself far beyond the limits of any normal human…
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500 feet below ice – Stig Severinsen sets new Guinness World Record
Yesterday on a single breath of air, Stig Severinsen sets a new official Guinness World Record by diving 500 feet (152.4m) below the ice in a frozen lake in East Greenland where nobody has ever been diving before! Post by Stig Ã…vall Severinsen.
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The Diving Response Explained – Stig Severinsen on Superhuman Showdown
Breath-holding world record holder Stig Severinsen demonstrates the diving reflex on Superhuman Showdown on Discovery Channel.
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Severinsen Sets World Record Under Ice
Danish freediver Stig Åvall Severinsen set a new world record last Saturday the 6th of March, swimming 72 meters under ice in one breath. This was in lake Knudsoe near Ry in Denmark. The former world record was 57.5 meters, swum by Wim Hof of the Netherlands in March 2001.