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Trampoline and Tumbling
A
trampoline is a gymnastic and recreational device consisting of a piece
of taut, strong fabric stretched over a steel frame using many coiled
springs to provide a rebounding force which propels the jumper high
into the air.
History
Walrus skins
It has been said
that one of the first sort of trampolining was done by the Eskimos who
used to toss each other into the air on a walrus skin, something like
the sheet used by firemen to catch people jumping out of burning
buildings.
Click on picture for video.
There also is
some evidence of people in England having been tossed into the air by a
number of people holding a blanket. These may or may not be the true
origins of the sport of trampolining, but it is certain that in the
early years of the 20th century some stage acts used a "bouncing bed"
on the stage to amuse audiences. The bouncing bed was in reality a form
of small trampoline covered by bedclothes on which the acrobats
performed mostly comedy routines.
Trapeze artistes
The trampoline
itself, according to circus lore, was supposedly first developed by an
artiste called Du Trampolin who saw the possibility of using the
trapeze safety net as a form of propulsion and landing device and
experimented with different systems of suspension, eventually reducing
the net to a practical size for separate performance. While there were
trampoline like devices used for shows and in the circus, the story of
Du Trampolin is probably a myth and no documentary evidence has been
found to support this.
The first modern
trampoline was built by George Nissen and Larry Griswold around 1934.
Nissen was a gymnastics and diving competitor and Griswold was a
tumbler on the gymnastics team, both at the University of Iowa, USA.
They had observed trapeze artists using a tight net to add
entertainment value to their performance and experimented by stretching
a piece of canvas, in which they had inserted grommets along each side,
to an angle iron frame by means of coiled springs. It was initially
used to train tumblers but soon became popular in its own right. The
name comes from the Spanish trampolÃÂn
meaning a diving board. George Nissen heard the word on a demonstration
tour in Mexico in the late 1930s and decided to use an anglicized form
as the trademark for the apparatus.
In 1942 Griswold
and Nissen created the Griswold-Nissen Trampoline & Tumbling
Company, and began making trampolines commercially in Cedar Rapids,
Iowa.
During World War
II, the United States Navy Flight School developed the use of the
trampoline in its training of pilots and navigators, giving them
concentrated practice in orientation such as had never been possible
before. After the war, the development of the space flight programme
again brought the trampoline into use to help train both American and
Soviet Astronauts, giving them experience of variable body positions in
flight.
A competitive
gymnastic sport of trampolining has been developed and it has been part
of the Olympic Games since 2000. On a competitive trampoline a user can
bounce to a height of up to ten metres. Trampolines feature in the
competitive sport of trampolining as well as in both Slamball, a
variant of basketball, and Bossaball, a variant of volleyball.
Modern
gymnastics, as regulated by the
Fration Internationale de
Gymnastique incorporates six distinct disciplines:
- Artistic gymnastics
(further classified as Men's Artistic Gymnastics and Women's Artistic
Gymnastics)
- Rhythmic gymnastics
- Sports aerobics
- Sports acrobatics
- Trampolining
- General gymnastics
- Power Tumbling
Gymnasts
perform a choreographed exercise 85 to 95 seconds long. Sometimes there
are school competitions when the music has to be 1 minute 30 seconds
long. The music has to be instrumental. The routines consist of
tumbling passes, and a series of jumps, dance elements, and turns on a
carpeted, springed floor 40 feet × 40 feet. All four
sides should be used to earn the maximum score. You cannot go outside
the white line or a 1-4 tenth deduction can be taken, depending on how
big the step was.
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