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  2. Bungee jumping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bungee_jumping

    Kushma Bungee Jump is the world's second-highest bungee jump with a height of 228 metres (748 ft). [23] It is located in the gorge of Kaligandaki River and world-first natural canyon bungee jump. Another commercial bungee jump currently in operation is just 13 metres (43 ft) smaller, at 220 metres (720 ft).

  3. Dangerous Sports Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dangerous_Sports_Club

    The Dangerous Sports Club was co-founded by David Kirke, [3] Chris Baker, Ed Hulton and Alan Weston in the 1970s. They first came to wide public attention by inventing modern day bungee jumping, by making the first modern jumps on 1 April 1979, from the Clifton Suspension Bridge, Bristol, England. [4]

  4. A. J. Hackett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._J._Hackett

    Allan John "A. J." Hackett ONZM (born May 1958) is a New Zealand entrepreneur who popularised the extreme sport of bungy jumping.He made a bungy jump from the Eiffel Tower in 1987 and founded the first commercial bungy site in 1988.

  5. David Kirke, pioneer of bungee jumping and Dangerous Sports ...

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  6. Extreme sport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extreme_sport

    Bungee jumping was treated as a novelty for a few years, then became a craze for young people, and is now an established industry for thrill seekers. The club also pioneered a surrealist form of skiing, holding three events at St. Moritz , Switzerland , in which competitors were required to devise a sculpture mounted on skis and ride it down a ...

  7. Bungee cord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bungee_cord

    A bungee cord (sometimes spelled bungie; also known as a shock cord or an ocky strap) is an elastic cord composed of one or more elastic strands forming a core, usually covered in a woven cotton or polypropylene sheath. The sheath does not materially extend elastically, but it is braided with its strands spiraling around the core so that a ...

  8. Who exactly is Geronimo -- and why do we say his name ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/2017-10-30-who-exactly-is-geronimo...

    Nowadays, this tradition has been carried on by adventurous folk who jump off various other objects: a diving board, a bungee-jumping cliff, a deck into a large pile of leaves. You’ve probably ...

  9. Trampoline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trampoline

    The trampoline-like life nets once used by firefighters to catch people jumping out of burning buildings were invented in 1887. The 19th-century poster for Pablo Fanque's Circus Royal refers to performance on trampoline. The device is thought to have been more like a springboard than the fabric-and-coiled-springs apparatus presently in use. [1]