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Stonehouse wrote that wreck of " the Mather is one of the best known examples a wooden freighter still available for examination." [1] The Mather is a popular wreck site for scuba diving as she sits upright with an intact deck and mostly intact stern superstructure. Overall, she is in very good condition, likely because she sank slowly enough ...
It lies in approximately 100 feet (30 m) of water and at 240 feet (73 m) in length provides ample scope for exploration. However, relatively little of the wreck involves penetration diving. The Hilma Hooker is regarded as one of the leading wreck diving sites in the Caribbean, according to Scuba Diving Travel Magazine. [3]
The wreck was found 5 miles (8.0 km) northwest of Boulder Reef and just south of Gull Island lying at a depth of 360 to 370 feet (110 to 110 m). [53] Later in 1959, Carl D. Bradley ' s owners, U.S. Steel, hired Los Angeles-based Global Marine Exploration Company to survey the wreck using the underwater television from the USS Submarex.
The divers were training with the navy when they spotted the wreck rising from the seafloor, officials said. Scuba divers stumble on 2,200-year-old shipwreck along coast of Croatia. Take a look
This dive is becoming less common, as the rapid deterioration of the wreck is making diving more difficult on top of the already treacherous dive to reach the vessel. SS Arratoon Apcar – 19th-century British steamship that is now a wreck in Florida; SMS Geier – Unprotected cruiser of the German Imperial Navy
The W.L. Wetmore lies on the bottom of Georgian Bay in a passage known as Devil Island Channel. Smashed and broken, the huge timbers and metal parts are surprisingly intact, serving as a vivid and ...
Nagle died before the wreck was positively identified. His close friend, John Chatterton refused to attend his funeral, insisting that the man inside the coffin was not his friend and associate - it was the monster who had killed Bill Nagle. [3] Richie Kohler, another diver closely connected with the U-869 expedition, was one of the pallbearers.
The boat wreck Scuba diving along the USAT Liberty wreck in Tulamben Bali, Indonesia. The wreck of the USAT Liberty lies in shallow water and is considered appropriate for divers of all certification levels. The ship rests in 30 metres of water, is roughly 25 metres from shore and can be reached with a short swim from the beach.