BUFFALO, New York (Reuters) - A man survived a 174-foot (53-meter)
plunge over Niagara's Horseshoe Falls on Monday but sustained
life-threatening injuries, Canadian police said.
The man, whose name has not been released, became only the third
person known to have lived through a fall over the massive cataract
without safety devices.
Canada's Niagara Parks Police said witnesses reported seeing the man
climb over a retaining wall about 20 feet above the brink of the falls
at mid-morning and deliberately jump into the swift waters.
He surfaced a few seconds later in the lower Niagara River Basin below, near an observation platform, police said.
He "was located by a Niagara Parks Police officer along the rocky
shoreline as he collapsed in waters that were up to the subject's
waist," police said in a statement.
In a rescue that lasted about 30 minutes, staff from several agencies extricated the man, thought to be about 40 years old.
He had sustained life-threatening injuries and was flown by an air
ambulance to a hospital in Hamilton, Ontario, for treatment, the
statement said. Police were investigating how and why he went over the
falls.
The Horseshoe Falls, one of the world's most popular tourist
attractions, sends about 675,000 gallons (2.6 million liters) of water
over its edge per second. It is one of two massive waterfalls, along
with the American Falls, that span the U.S.-Canada border.
Decades ago, daredevils would tempt fate and go over the Horseshoe
Falls in barrels or other protective devices - and were often killed.
That is now an illegal stunt that can result in a fine or jail time.
In 2009, an American man survived an unaided plunge over the falls,
after a U.S. tourist survived a suicide attempt over the falls in 2003. A
young boy who was wearing a life jacket survived a fall over the
cataract in 1960 after the boat he was in capsized.
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