The Nigerian man had been lost at sea after his tugboat, the AHT Jascon-4, suddenly capsized and sank 100 feet below the surface of the ocean. Harrison Okene, a cook, was trapped in a four-foot bathroom with no way to signal for help, no food, no water—nothing, for three long days.
His miraculous survival was filmed six months ago by rescuing divers who had come to collect bodies and instead saw Okene’s desperate, outreached hand seeking help. This week, the video has gone viral, bringing international attention to the power of an air bubble.
So how’d that bubble last so long?
Eric Hexdall, a nurse and clinical director of diving medicine at the Duke Center for Hyperbaric Medicine and Environmental Physiology, estimates that in an area of about 13.5 cubic meters—roughly the size of the air bubble Okene was trapped in—a person has about 56 hours before carbon dioxide toxicity sets in.
“If you’re trapped in something like that, your carbon dioxide levels will build to a toxic level before you use up the oxygen,” Hexdall said, emphasizing that carbon dioxide would be the first problem Okene would have faced, before running out of oxygen.
In addition to Okene creating more trapped carbon dioxide in the course of normal breathing, there is more carbon dioxide under water than on land.
Hexdall said that there are stages of deep sea carbon dioxide toxicity.
“At 50,000 parts per million (of carbon dioxide particles), you see measurable signs of toxicity,” Hexdall said, referring to a “buzz” or “high” a person would experience. “At 70,000 parts per million, you lose consciousness pretty rapidly.”
Hexdall estimates that Okene began to experience the first symptoms of carbon dioxide toxicity after about 56 hours.
“It wouldn’t have necessarily poisoned him,” Hexdall said. “It would have taken about 79 hours for him to be unconscious from carbon dioxide.”
Okene was rescued after 60 hours of being trapped—right in the window for survival.
Okene also managed to elude the threat of high air pressure, which can be deadly under water.
Under increased air pressure, human blood can become saturated with nitrogen—Okene’s nitrogen levels during his ordeal were much higher than ours on the Earth’s surface.
Diving deep can bring on “nitrogen narcosis”—when under more than 80 feet of water, a swimmer can become dazed from the overwhelming levels of nitrogen in the water.
Then there’s the problem of readjusting to surface air pressure after rescue.
“He can’t come back to the surface immediately,” said Petar Denoble, vice president of research at the Divers Alert Network. “If he did, he would die. He needs to get into an underwater habitat.”
To get Okene and the divers who saved him back to normal pressure levels, the group had to enter a diving bell, also known as a transfer capsule.
According to Denoble, this vessel would have been “at the same pressure as the bottom of the ocean,” allowing for the group to be transported from one location to another while maintaining the pressure of the original location.
From the diving bell, Okene and the rescue team “crawls through a tunnel where it is warm and dry,” entering a decompression chamber. This chamber allows people to gradually adjust to normal pressure levels.
Regardless of the science, Hexdall said Okene was lucky to have survived his ordeal: “I don’t know what it was—it was divine providence.” Click to signup for FREE news updates, latest information and hottest gists everyday
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THERE IS ONLY ONE WORD FOR THIS- MIRACLE. it was a miracle, like you rightly said, a divine providence.
ReplyDeleteCongrats.........................
ReplyDeleteThis is God helping this man
ReplyDeletehey man, u are created for a greater purpose. thank GOD for ur miracle brother.
ReplyDeleteMay be the man has something in common with Jonah of the bible, he should better go and seek God about his life and take the necessary steps
ReplyDeleteJonas of our time, simple. The earlier we believe that, there exists a Science beyond science, the better for us.Glory be to God.
ReplyDeleteWhy praise god, it was him who sank the boat.
ReplyDelete@Kat Von Dee: who told you that God sank the boat? Even if He did, know ye that it was for a purpose. And that purpose is to glorify Him. Praise and glory to you mighty God for saving his life from the depths of the ocean. I praise you God Almighty.
ReplyDelete@Kat Von Dee: your comment simply shows your shallow knowledge of who GOD is.
ReplyDeleteBaba you to much. There is no god like you. I will continue to worship you as this is your doing and is marvelous in our eyes. I will continue to be faithful and grateful to you forever. I thank you for saving Okene and proof to every one that you are more than science.
ReplyDeleteKat Von Dee, are you out of your mind. Every good and perfect gift comes from God. He cant be responsible for a mishap. Wake up
ReplyDeleteTo God alone be all the glory, for he is a God of impossibility confirming his word that life and death are in his hand. Okene, if u hv not known God, pls seek him now, tomorrow may be too late. God purpose for ur creation u must try and fulfill.
ReplyDeleteWht kat von meaNt was d guy rescued z d one dat sunk d ship , any way Gods name remain praised for eveR
ReplyDeleteAwesome God,who is like thee?Glory,honour and majesty be yours forever and ever.Amen.
ReplyDeleteIt is the lord's doing.We thank God for the life of Okene,its God's mercy upon his life.
ReplyDelete