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A sepia-toned photograph of the famous sunken USS Kittiwake (ASR-13) in Grand Cayman Island
The Gulf of Aqaba is known for its scuba diving sites such as these cleansed and deliberately sunken artificial structures that become havens for coral and fish life, not only rejuvenating the underwater environment but providing safe locations for recreational diving in a warm climate.
Bridge on sunken naval ship
Some scratchs and grain. Scanned print.
SS Selma is the only permanent, and prominent, wreck along the Houston Ship Channel. It lies approximately one mile north of Galveston Island.
Underwater scene. Underwater wreck. Sunken ship, Scuba diving. Exploration. Adventure.
This well-preserved Hellcat aircraft wreck stands out as one of the Solomon Islands' most easily reachable airplane wrecks. Resting upright and complete, it lies in a mere 9 meters of crystal-clear water. The Grumman F6F Hellcat, designed as a carrier-based fighter to supplant the earlier F4F Wildcat, rose to prominence as the Navy's dominant fighter in the latter stages of World War II, a status it never relinquished.\n\nRenowned for its robust and efficient carrier-based design, the Hellcat effectively countered the Mitsubishi A6M Zero, playing a pivotal role in securing air superiority over the Pacific. Its straightforward, highly effective design remained relatively unaltered throughout the war, with over 12,200 units produced in just over two years.\n\nThe wreck rests upon a bed of fragmented coral, surrounded by delicate branching coral formations, ensuring minimal silt disturbance and excellent underwater visibility. Undoubtedly, it ranks among the most easily accessible airplane wrecks in the Solomon Islands.
S.S. Selma Concrete Ship Shipwreck In Galveston Bay frontal shot
Hull of ww2 Japanese naval cargo vessel
Scuba diver on the wreck of the Iona ship in the red sea offshore from Yanbu, Saudi Arabia
Since 1941, when it was hit by german bombs, the SS Thistlegorm lies on the bottom of the Red Sea
HMAS Swan shipwreck off Dunsborough on Western Australian coast. Photographed while free diving.
A wreck Diving in Chuuk Lagoon
The ex-USS Kittiwake was a Submarine Rescue vessel (ASR-13). She was part of the 6th Submarine squadron (SUBRON 6) home ported at the Destroyer-Submarine piers in Norfolk, VA. The location for sinking the Kittiwake is at the northern end of Seven Mile Beach, on the West or lee side of Grand Cayman.
Wide angle underwater photography with a special circular fisheye lens. The famous Liberty ship wreck at Tulamben, Bali, Indonesia.
Old ship on the seashore.
Truk Lagoon, Micronesia on Dec 8, 2014: fuel tanks of fighter planes in hull of sunken Japanese naval vessel
The wreck of the Iona ship in the red sea offshore from Yanbu, Saudi Arabia
Fuselage from the wreck of a Douglas DC-3 airplane near CoCoView Channel, sunk as an artificial reef in the Carribbean Sea, Roatan, Honduras
Underwater. Wreck diving Thistlegorm. BSA M20 motorcycle was part of a shipment of military equipment on its way to aid the Allies during World War II. The SS Thistlegorm was a British armed Merchant Navy ship built in 1940 by Joseph Thompson & Son in Sunderland, England. She was sunk on 6 October 1941 near Ras Muhammad in the Red Sea and is now a well known diving site.
Trash on floor of Los Angeles River at the Vanalden pedestrian bridge
Wreck diving
Person Snorkeling In Ocean
The wreck of the Produce, a Norwegian cargo that sunk in 1974 in the marine protected area of Aliwal Shoal on the east coast of South Africa.
Norton 16H Motorcycle in the SS Thistlegorm Ship Wreck Cargo Hold
Diving in Jordan along the coastline south of Aqaba on a sunken C130 airplane wreck.
DCIM\\100GOPRO\\G0854050.Japanese navy airplane Betty bomber in WW2\n\nChuuk (Truk lagoon), Federated States of Micronesia (FSM).\nHere is the world's greatest wreck diving destination.
A large partially decomposed shipwreck lying at the bottom of the Red Sea, covered with algae and corals.
Manitowoc, Wisconsin, USA - January 12, 2024: The USS Cobia (SS245), during a snowstorm, and part of the Wisconsin Maritime Museum.
This navy floatplane, an Aichi E13A1-1 or Jake type reconnaissance seaplane is one of the most intact wrecks in Micronesia, resting at 45 feet (15m). Beautiful scenario of a II WW Japanese seaplane sunken and a female scuba diver in Palau - Micronesia. The Jake could be found in many lagoons where the land mass did not support an airfield, but they also operated from cruisers and battleships. Two of the planes can be seen (in Palau) in very shallow waters in a cave of Babelthuap.
Free Images: "bestof:Borneo Maru, 5,864 gross tons, back broken by submarine attack. Photographed by USS Nautilus (SS 168), released October 24, 1942. Official U.S. Navy Photograph,"
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