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Ramón Bravo

Ramón Bravo
Ramon bravo.jpg
Ramón Bravo in 1960
Born Ramón Bravo Prieto
(1925-10-21)21 October 1925
Piedras Negras
Coahuila, Mexico
Died 21 February 1998(1998-02-21) (aged 72)
Isla Mujeres
Quintana Roo, Mexico
Nationality Mexican
Occupation swimmer
photographer
filmmaker
writer
Children 3, Ramón, Ruth & Débora

Ramón Bravo (21 October 1925 – 21 February 1998) was a Mexican diver, photographer and underwater filmmaker. Bravo was born in Piedras Negras, Coahuila in northern Mexico. Bravo was first known as a famous Mexican swimmer and competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics. However, he soon became involved with diving and underwater photography – gaining him fame in both America and Europe as an oceanographer. Bravo developed a fascination for sharks and devoted a large portion of his life to filming and studying sharks. He is widely known for the discovery, study, and photography of "sleeping sharks" near Isla Mujeres in the Caribbean in the 1970s, where tiger sharks were seen there to be "sleeping" on the ocean floor. Bravo served as Jacques Cousteau's dive guide in the cave of sleeping sharks and reefs surrounding Isla Mujeres.

Also a well-known journalist and writer during the mid-1960s and 1970s; he wrote among others following novels and works:

One of his novels later became a film called Tintorera (1977) directed by René Cardona Jr. The underwater photography was by Ramón Bravo. He also photographed and directed underwater scenes of the James Bond movie Licence to Kill (1989) starring Timothy Dalton.

Ramón Bravo died on 21 February 1998 by accident, because of a heart attack caused by an electric shock from his home in Isla Mujeres.



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