Sonar Team

A training image of a submerged vehicle (no one is inside)
A training image of a submerged vehicle (no one is inside)

Locating a drowning victim in a body of water is a difficult and time-consuming process. Even if witnesses can accurately report where they saw a person go into the water, subsurface currents and other factors can move a submerged body a significant distance. Dragging with a hook rig often isn’t usually effective because of underwater obstructions, and unless the body of water is very small recovery diving becomes a tedious and often dangerous operation. Poor to zero visibility is often the case, and the water is usually cold once a diver goes a few feet down.

SONAR, which stands for SOnic Navigation And Ranging, uses high-frequency sound pulses that are reflected back to the system where the on-board computer produces an image of the underwater environment. (It is the “ping” that is often depicted in submarine movies.) Many SAR teams and related emergency services now incorporate a SONAR capability to their practices. BSARD has a Humminbird Helix 12 G4N system and an expert operator/analysis team available at no charge to the requesting agency.

Our best practice protocol uses dogs, SONAR, and divers in a specific process designed to minimize the risks and increase the probability of success.

  1. The entirety of the body of still or moving water presents the greatest challenge. Witness interviews, if available, can narrow the search area somewhat.
  2. Open-water certified human remains detection dogs further define the areas of probability, based on current, depth, and surface air movement. This becomes the general area to be scanned by SONAR.
  3. The SONAR operator performs a grid search by boat and the analyst looks for any “Targets of Interest” (TOI). The team will drop a sound-reflective cage as close to the TOI as possible. The cage has a buoyed line attached with a surface float.
  4. The diver goes down the buoyed line to investigate the TOI. If the target is the victim then the diver team can initiate the recovery.