Monday, July 30, 2007

Dynamic Speakers, Inc. presents “Speaker of the Day,” a new and exciting way to get keynote speaker suggestions. If you are in need of a convention speaker, conference speaker, or guest speaker contact Dynamic Speakers, Inc. On our website, www.dynamicspeakers.com, we feature interesting speakers who have solid reputations. Professional speakers who have been athletes, adventurers, astronauts and authors are listed along with financial experts, business leaders, and economists. We work with great speakers with small fees and large fees. In-demand speakers and up-and-coming speakers are all within our realm of business. We also have trend speakers such as gerontologists, leadership experts, trainers, and team builders. If you want something extraordinary, we can provide comedians, magicians, hypnotists, musicians, artists and many other entertainers. We are a full-service bureau and offer customized programs and preset speech topics for most of our outstanding speakers! Please contact us about presenters for your next meeting or event! And check out our “Speaker of the Day” today: Dr. Joe MacInnis.

Joseph MacInnis is a medical doctor who spent three decades studying the physiology and psychology of men and women working under the sea. Between 1964 and 1994, he led thirty expeditions and logged more than 5,000 hours under the Great Lakes and the Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic oceans. Since 1994, Dr. MacInnis has been using his undersea experiences to explore new ways of improving the relationships between the human family and the natural world.
In 1962, Joseph MacInnis graduated in medicine from the University of Toronto. After his internship at the Toronto General Hospital he was awarded a Link Foundation Fellowship to study diving medicine at the University of Pennsylvania under Dr Christian J. Lambertsen. In 1964, he became medical director of Edwin Link’s Man-In Sea Project and in 1965 medical director of Link’s new company, Ocean Systems Inc.

Between 1964 and 1970, as Ocean Systems became the world’s largest diving and underwater engineering company, Dr. MacInnis and his associates carried out some of the deepest and longest dives ever made, including a 48 hour saturation dive to 432 feet in the Caribbean (1964), a 48 hour saturation dive to 636 feet in the Gulf of Mexico (1967) and a 700 foot submarine lock-out dive in the Caribbean (1968). In 1969, he became a medical consultant to the United States Navy’s SEA LAB 3 program.

In 1970, Dr. MacInnis was asked by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau to assist in the research and writing of Canada’s first National Ocean Policy. At the same time, supported by the Canadian government, he initiated the first of eleven diving expeditions to study the systems and techniques needed to work safely under the ice in the near-freezing waters of the Arctic Ocean. During the next ten years, the more than one thousand dives made by his teams, from Alaska to Baffin Island to the North Pole, included the construction of SUB IGLOO, the world’s first undersea polar station, the first filmed encounters with Harp seals and Bowhead, Narwhal and Beluga whales, and the first science dives ever made under the pack ice at the North Pole.

Between 1978 and 1983, Dr. MacInnis led the team that discovered, explored, and filmed HMS BREADALBANE, a three-masted British barque crushed by the ice in the Northwest Passage in 1853. Located in 340 feet of water 600 miles north of the Arctic Circle, HMS BREADALBANE is the world’s northernmost known shipwreck.

In 1984, Dr. MacInnis turned his attention to the study of humans and machines exploring the deep ocean. In 1985, he was an advisor to the Titanic discovery team and two years later made his first dive to the wreck. Between 1985 and 1991, in the Russian Mirs and French Nautile research subs, his deep ocean dives included a 10,000-foot dive into Monterey Canyon, a 16,000-foot descent into the eastern Atlantic and two dives to the bow and stern sections of the Titanic.

In 1991, he was co-leader of one of the most daring deep sea projects ever conducted, a two million dollar expedition to film Titanic in the Imax giant-screen format and the first to study the great ship in her biological, geological and metallurgical contexts. It was this expedition that inspired James Cameron’s Hollywood film.

In 1993, Dr. MacInnis was given a contract by the International Joint Commission to study how evolving media techniques could be used to enhance the cleanup of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River. In 1994, as a result of this study, he led the team that made the first multiple research sub dives to the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald in Lake Superior and a 19th century schooner in Lake Erie.

Dr. MacInnis is currently working with James Cameron—the director of Titanic— and his documentary film company, Earthship Productions. In 2003, he accompanied Cameron and his team on a two-month expedition to film volcanic vents at the bottom of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Found at depths down to 4000 meters, the vents are surrounded by bizarre communities of life. Using two ships and four research subs, they made 40 dives at ten vent sites and edited the footage into $14-million, 3-D Imax film called “Aliens of the Deep.” The film and Dr. MacInnis’ companion book were released in early 2005. This summer, Dr. MacInnis is working with Cameron on “Last Mysteries of Titanic,” a $5-million, two-hour live broadcast for the Discovery Channel. The program will air July 24.


For the past decade, Dr. MacInnis has been working on innovative ways using multi-media technologies and experiential learning, to improve the crucial life-support relationships between the human family and the natural world. Each year he gives motivational lectures about exploration and its virtues, including courage, communication and teamwork, to high schools, colleges and more than twenty Fortune 500 companies. His audiences include IBM, Ford, Kodak, General Motors, Merrill Lynch and Microsoft.

Between 1996 and 2004, Dr. MacInnis chaired the TD Financial Group’s Friends of the Environment Foundation — a unique partnership between the TD bank and its customers. The Foundation has contributed more than 30 million dollars to environmental projects in Canada. Currently, he is Chair Emeritus.

Dr. MacInnis is actively involved in a number of community service projects including the Trudeau Foundation in Montreal, Pearson College of the Pacific in Victoria, and the Trudeau Center for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Toronto.

Dr. MacInnis has written nine books and numerous articles for newspapers and magazines, including Scientific American and National Geographic and Wired. His books include Underwater Man, Saving the Ocean, Fitzgerald’s Storm, Titanic in a New Light, Surviving Terrorism: How to Protect Your Health, Wealth and Safety. His most recent books, Breathing Underwater (Penguin) and Aliens of the Deep (National Geographic Books) were published in 2005.

Dr. MacInnis’ work has earned him a number of distinctions including four honorary doctorates, the Queen’s Anniversary Medal, the Admiral’s Medal and his country’s highest honor, the Order of Canada.

To see more information about Dr. Joe MacInnis please click here.

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