BASE Jumping

© Jodi Gallegos

Doing an E, Copyrighted, Alamy.com

Humans are enthralled by the idea of flight. Is it the sensation of flying or falling that sends BASE jumpers hurtling over the edges of perfectly stable objects?

BASE jumping in history

History is littered with tales of ingenious (and not-so-brilliant) attempts at flight. Although BASE jumping evolved from skydiving there are historic textual references to similar activities. In the 12th century, Chinese acrobats used parachute-like objects during gymnastics routines to slow their falls. Throughout the early 1900's examples of BASE jumping were limited to isolated incidents like Frederick Law's 1912 jump from the Statue of Liberty. The movie-going world was introduced to BASE jumping during the opening sequence of The Spy Who Loved Me in 1976. Until then BASE jumping was viewed as a stunt done for movies or publicity. Carl Boenish, cinematographer and "Father of Modern BASE Jumping" filmed the first jumps from El Capitan. His films showed the world that with the proper equipment and technique BASE jumping was a repeatable, recreational activity.

But what exactly is BASE jumping?

Using a parachute, a person jumps from one of four fixed objects.