Batting-practice structure

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Possible Answers: CAGE.

Last seen on: Newsday.com Crossword – Feb 8 2018

Random information on the term “CAGE”:

static protection from sharks for divers

A shark-proof cage is a metal cage used by an underwater diver to observe dangerous types of sharks up close in relative safety. This can include various species of shark, but the most commonly observed within the confines of a cage are the great white shark and the bull shark, which are both known to be aggressive at times. Shark-proof cages are built to withstand being rammed and bitten by sharks, and are intended to protect the user from potential injury. Cages can provide a visual and tactile deterrent to sharks.[citation needed] Cage-diving allows people to closely monitor sharks for scientific, commercial or recreational purposes, and sometimes interact with them.

The shark-proof cage is also used in the controversial exercise of shark baiting, where tourists are lowered in a cage while the tour guides bait the water to attract sharks or stimulate certain behavior.

Shark cages were first developed by Jacques Cousteau. Cousteau used a shark cage during the production of The Silent World which was released in 1956. Rodney Fox developed his own shark cage in the 1960s. Fox’s first design was inspired by a visit to a zoo he made after surviving a near-fatal shark attack in 1963. Later designs were refined further and put to use by documentary filmmakers and abalone fishers who sought personal protection from great white sharks.[citation needed] James Gimbel was one filmmaker involved in the design of a shark-proof cage which was used during the production of Blue water, white death (1971).

CAGE on Wikipedia