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Scuba diver in a wet suit explores a wreck in Panama City Beach, Florida, while holding a spear gun in one hand and camera in another with a school of fish in foreground.
The underpass of a sea passenger ship
Diving on the reefs of the Palau archipelago. These ship wrecks were from Japanese Navy at WW2.
A climber as he meticulously ascends a rugged rocky cliff. The clear blue sky above and the focused demeanor of the climber highlight the challenges and the thrill associated with rock climbing.
A group of unrecognizable divers explore a sunken shipwreck in the blue, mediterranean sea at Naxos island, Greece
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.
Deep inside, wreck diving can be explored from both the outside and the inside.
Diving in Jordan along the coastline south of Aqaba on a sunken C130 airplane wreck.
Diver exploring the outside of the wreck Cedar Pride
Young man climbing a steep mountain, using climbing equipment.
The wreck of the MV Karwela near Gozo, Malta
A climber's perspective showing another climber ahead, secured with ropes on a steep rock face.
Scuba photo of a small ship wreck in the Atlantic ocean
Shipwreck
Since 1941, when it was hit by german bombs, the SS Thistlegorm lies on the bottom of the Red Sea
Diving in Jordan along the coastline south of Aqaba on a sunken C130 airplane wreck.
Remaining of cargo ship on ocean bottom, Maldives
Warning Sign on Dionyssos Beach at Rethymno Province in Crete, Greece
Vintage metal binoculars in mountain Ritsa lake in Abkhazia, Georgia. Tourist telescope against blurred water background. Binoculars for sightseeing. Translation: Inspection of the waterfall
Climbers climbing a rocky mountain in Rio de Janeiro
Black Coral Under Water
View of the MV Captain Keith Tibbetts shipwreck and female diver in Cayman Brac - Cayman Islands
amazing sunken ship in the depths of the sea with good lighting
Wide angle view of sporty man climbing in summer on Via Ferrata in Switzerland
A stack of old wooden military green boxes with ammunition.
Diver on a ship wreck in the gulf of Aqaba in Jordan
old scuba diving. Diver's equipment. A mask, fins and a green diving suit. Clothing for diving under water with an oxygen tank in Navy
Detail view of the bull-bar equiped with two spotlights and winch with Queensland number plate in outback Queensland
Scuba diver point of view. Wreck diving over a shipwreck.
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.
Free Images: "bestof:Sabotage. Deadlier than a dive bomber. Watch out^ - NARA - 535208.tif Scope and content General notes 535208 Local identifier 179-WP-1358 Office for Emergency"
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