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{{Redirect|Underwater diving sites|the main article about the activity|Recreational diving}}
[[File:Coral - Marsa Alam, Egypt - August 12, 2011.jpg |thumb| Recreational diver over a coral reef in the Red Sea]]
'''Recreational dive sites''' are specific places that recreational [[scuba diver]]s go to enjoy the underwater environment. They include recreational [[diver training]] sites and [[technical diving]] sites beyond the range generally accepted for [[recreational diving]]. In this context all diving done for recreational purposes is included. [[Professional diving]] tends to be done where the job is, and with the exception of the recreational diving service industry, does not generally occur at specific sites chosen for their easy access, pleasant conditions or interesting features.
Recreational dive sites may be found in a wide range of bodies of water, and may be popular for various reasons, including accessibility, biodiversity, spectacular topography, historical interest and artifacts (such as shipwrecks), and water clarity. Tropical waters of high biodiversity and colourful sea life are popular recreational diving vacation destinations. South-east Asia, the Caribbean islands, the Red Sea and the Great Barrier Reef of Australia are regions where the clear, warm, waters and colourful and diverse sea life have made recreational diving an economically important tourist industry.
Recreational divers may accept a relatively high level of risk to dive at a site perceived to be of special interest. [[Wreck diving]] and [[cave diving]] have their adherents, and enthusiasts will endure considerable hardship, risk and expense to visit caves and wrecks where few have been before. Some sites are popular almost exclusively for their convenience for training and practice of skills, such as flooded quarries. They are generally found where more interesting and pleasant diving is not locally available, or may only be accessible when weather or water conditions permit.
==Dive site==
The term ''dive site'' is used differently depending on context. In professional diving in some regions it may refer to the surface worksite from which the diving operation is supported and controlled by the diving supervisor. This may alternatively be called the diving operation control site, dive base, or control point. The professional dive site may also legally include the underwater work site and the area between the surface control area and underwater work site.<ref name="CoP Inshore 2017" /><ref name="CoP Scientific" /><ref name="Lexicon" /><ref name="Ontario" /><ref name="Nova Scotia" /> In recreational diving it generally refers to the underwater environment of a dive. Where a site is named, it generally refers to the locality around a specific feature, which may be reasonably conveniently visited during a dive centred or focused on that feature. Conventions may vary regionally. In some places a named dive site may refer to a specific route with a given starting point, in others it may refer more loosely to a larger region which is far bigger than a diver could reasonably visit on dives with a common point.<ref name="Africa Geographic" /> Such regions may later be specified in more detail as they become better known, and what was originally referred to a single site may become several sites when they are described. Where a site is named for a shipwreck, it generally refers to the known extent of the wreckage, regardless of size. Synonyms include dive spot, dive location and diving site.
===Names of sites===
Names for the sites themselves range from descriptive through quixotic to pretentious, as they are chosen at the whim of whoever dives there and names the site. There is often no standardisation, and the same site may be known by different names to different divers. Few sites are reliably mapped or have a published description with an accurate position, and many of these are caves or wrecks of identified ships.
===Rating of sites===
Sites are generally rated by people who do not have an exhaustive experience of the full range of sites throughout the world, and preferences differ. It is unlikely that any published ratings are unbiased. Conditions at most sites vary from day to day, often considerably, depending on various factors, particularly recent weather.
==Bodies of water commonly used for recreational diving==
* [[Sea]] and [[Ocean]] [[coastline|shorelines]] and [[shoals]]. These are salt water sites and may support high [[biodiversity]] of [[plant]] and [[animal]] life forms. [[Shipwrecks]] are also common on some coasts, and are very popular attractions for a large number of divers.
* [[Lake]]s, usually containing fresh water. Large lakes have many features of seas including wrecks and a variety of aquatic life. Artificial lakes, such as [[clay pit]]s, [[gravel pit]]s, and [[quarries]] often have lower visibility. Some lakes are at high altitude and may require special considerations for [[altitude diving]].
* Abandoned and flooded quarries are popular in inland areas for diver training and sometimes also recreational diving. Rock quarries may have reasonable underwater visibility if there is not so much mud or silt to cause low visibility. As they are not natural environments and usually privately owned, quarries often contain features intentionally placed for divers to explore, such as sunken boats, automobiles, aircraft, and abandoned machinery and structures. Flooded mines may provide the equivalent of flooded caves with an [[overhead environment]], though generally with a known extent.
* [[River]]s generally contain fresh water but are often shallow and murky and may have strong currents.
* [[Caves]] containing water provide exotic and interesting, though relatively hazardous, opportunities for [[cave diving|exploration]].
==Popular features of dive sites==
[[File:Coral reef locations.jpg|thumb|upright=2|[[NASA]] image [http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/coralreef_image.html] showing locations of significant [[coral reef]]s, which are often sought out by divers for their abundant, diverse life forms.]]
There are a wide range of [[underwater]] features which may contribute to the popularity of a dive site:
* Accessibility is important, but not critical. Some divers will travel long distances at considerable cost to get to a site with exceptional features.
* Biodiversity at the site: Popular examples are [[coral]], [[sea sponge|sponge]]s, [[fish]], [[sting ray]]s, [[mollusc]]s, [[cetacea]]ns, [[Pinniped|seal]]s, [[shark]]s and [[crustacean]]s.
* The Topography of the site: [[Coral reef]]s, walls (underwater [[cliff]]s), rocky [[reef]]s, gullies, [[cave]]s, overhangs and swim-throughs (short tunnels or arches) can be spectacular. Terminology for the topography of dive sites is generally consistent with oceanographic practice, with occasional more eccentric usage.
* Historical or cultural items at the site: [[Shipwreck]]s, sunken [[aircraft]] and archaeological sites, apart from their historical value, form artificial [[habitat (ecology)|habitats]] for marine life making them more attractive as dive sites.
* Underwater [[visibility]]: This can vary widely between sites and with time and other conditions. Poor visibility is caused by suspended particles in the water, such as [[mud]], [[silt]], suspended [[organic matter]] and plankton. Currents and surge can stir up the particles. Rainfall runoff can carry particulate matter from the shore. Diving close to the sediments on the bottom can result in the particles being kicked up by the divers fins. Sites which generally have good visibility are preferred, but poor visibility will often be tolerated if the site is sufficiently attractive for other reasons.
* Water temperature: Warm water diving is comfortable and convenient, and requires less equipment. Although cold water is uncomfortable and can cause [[hypothermia]] it can be interesting because different species of underwater life thrive in cold conditions.
* Currents and [[tide|tidal flow]]s can transport [[nutrient]]s to underwater environments increasing the variety and density of life at a site. Currents can also be dangerous to divers as they can carry the diver being away from the surface support or the planned exit point. Currents that flow over large obstructions can cause strong local vertical currents and turbulence that are dangerous because they may cause the diver to lose [[buoyancy]] control risking [[barotrauma]], or impact against the bottom terrain.
==Regions where recreational diving is a major tourist industry==
*[[Great Barrier Reef]] of [[Australia]]{{cn|date=December 2018}}
*[[Apo Island]] in the [[Philippines]]{{cn|date=December 2018}}
==Regions of notable biodiversity==
===Temperate===
[[File:Dive sites of Cape Town.png|thumb|upright=1.5|Recreational dive sites of the greater Cape Town region. The yellow lines indicate the boundary of the Table Mountain National Park MPA.]]
[[File:Marine Bioregions of the South African EEZ.png|thumb|Marine bioregions of the South African coast]]
The [[Table Mountain National Park Marine Protected Area]]<!--proper name--> around the [[Cape Peninsula]] is a popular diving region in the vicinity of [[Cape Town]], [[South Africa]], with more than 200 named dive sites, many of which have been surveyed and mapped. The Cape Peninsula marks the boundary between the cool temperate [[Marine ecoregions of the South African exclusive economic zone#West coast|Benguela ecoregion]], which extends from [[Namibia]] to [[Cape Point]], and is dominated by the cold [[Benguela Current]], and the warm temperate [[Agulhas ecoregion]] to the east of Cape Point which extends eastwards to the [[Mbashe River]]. The break at Cape Point is very distinct in the inshore depth ranges, and the waters of the east and west sides of the peninsula support noticeably different ecologies, though there is a significant overlap of [[List of marine animals of the Cape Peninsula and False Bay|resident organisms]]. There are a large proportion of species endemic to South Africa along this coastline.
===Tropical===
*[[Great Barrier Reef]]
*[[Indonesia]]
*[[Red Sea#Tourism|The Red Sea]]
*[[Caribbean Sea]]
==Dive sites of unique or exceptional interest==
===Wreck dive sites===
{{see also|Wreck diving}}
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Vessel Name
! Position
! Location
! Country/Territory
|-
| {{MV|Adolphus Busch||2}}
|
| [[Looe Key]], Florida
| United States
|-
| {{USS|Arthur W. Radford|DD-968|6}}
|
| [[Cape May]], New Jersey
| United States
|-
| {{HMAS|Adelaide|FFG 01|6}}
|
| [[Avoca Beach]], New South Wales
| Australia
|-
| {{MV|Antipolis||2}}
| S33°59.06’ E018°21.37’
| Oudekraal, [[Cape Town]]
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Aster||2}}
| S34°03.891’ E018°20.955’
| Hout Bay, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
|{{RMS|Athens}}
| S33°53.85’ E018°24.57’
| Mouille Point, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{HNLMS|Bato}}
| S34°10.998’ E018°25.560’
| Simon's Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{SS|Bia||2}}
| S34°16'12.7" E018°22'38.3"
| Olifantsbospunt, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{USCGC|Bibb|WPG-31|6}}<ref name="ADMezine1"/>
|
| Florida
| United States
|-
| {{SAS|Bloemfontein}}
| S34°14.655’ E018°39.952’
| False Bay, Western Cape
| South Africa
|-
| ''[[Barge Boss 400]]''
| S34°02.216’ E018°18.573’
| Leeuwgat Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMAS|Brisbane|D 41|6}}
|
| [[Mooloolaba]], Queensland
| Australia
|-
| {{ship|East Indiaman|Brunswick}}
| S34°10.880’ E018°25.607’
| Simon's Town, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMAS|Canberra|FFG 02|6}}
|
| Barwon Heads, Victoria
| Australia
|-
| {{HMNZS|Canterbury|F421|6}}
|
| [[Bay of Islands]]
| New Zealand
|-
| {{HMCS|Cape Breton|ARE 100|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{SS|Cape Matapan||2}}
| S34°53.233' E018°24.533'
| Table Bay, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Captain Keith Tibbetts||2}}
|
| Cayman Brac
| Cayman Islands
|-
| {{ship|CS|Charles L Brown}}<ref name="Charlie Brown"/>
|
| Sint Eustatius
| Leeward Islands
|-
| {{HMCS|Chaudière|DDE 235|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{SS|Clan Monroe||2}}
| S34°08.817' E18°18.949'
| Kommetjie, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{SS|Clan Stuart||2}}
| S34°10.303’ E018°25.842’
| Simon's Town, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMCS|Columbia|DDE 260|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{USCGC|Cuyahoga|WIX-157|6}}
|
| [[Virginia Capes]]
| United States
|-
| {{ship|Australian Army ship|Crusader|AV 2767|6}}
|
| [[Flinders Reef]] off [[Cape Moreton]], [[Queensland]]
| Australia
|-
| {{MV|Daeyang Family||2}}
|
| Robben Island, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Dania||2}}<ref name="Buccaneer"/>
|
| Mombasa
| Kenya
|-
| [[HMS Barbrake|SAS ''Fleur'']]
| S34°10.832’ E018°33.895’
| False Bay, Western Cape
| South Africa
|-
| {{USCGC|Duane|WPG-33|6}}<ref name="ADMezine1"/>
|
| Florida
| United States
|-
| Fontao
|
| Durban
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|G.B. Church||2}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{SAS|Gelderland}}
| S34°02.070’ E018°18.180’
| Leeuwgat Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Gemsbok||2}}
|
| Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| [[HMS Thames|SATS ''General Botha'']]
| S34°13.679’ E018°38.290’
| False Bay
| South Africa
|-
| [[USNS General Hoyt S. Vandenberg (T-AGM-10)|USNS ''General Hoyt S. Vandenberg'' (T-AGM-10)]]<ref name="Vandenberg"/>
|
| Key West, Florida
| United States
|-
| ''[[Glen Strathallan]]''
|
| [[Plymouth]]
| United Kingdom
|-
| {{SAS|Good Hope}}
| S34°16.054’ E018°28.850’
| Smitswinkel Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMAS|Hobart|D 39|6}}
|
| [[Yankalilla Bay]], South Australia
| Australia
|-
| {{ship|VOIC ship|Het Huis te Kraaiestein}}
| S33°58.85’ E018°21.65’
| Oudekraal, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{ship|Barque|Highfields}}
| S33°53’07.9” E18°25’49.8”
| Table Bay, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{SS|Hypatia||2}}
| S33°50.10’ E018°22.90’
| Robben Island, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| ''Inganess Bay''<ref name="BVI Inganess"/>
|
|
| British Virgin Islands
|-
|[[Jura (ship, 1854)|Jura]]
|
|Lake Constance
|Switzerland
|-
| {{MV|Katsu Maru||2}}
| S34°03.903’ E018°20.949’
| Hout Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Keryavor and the Jo May||2}}
| S34°02.037’ E018°18.636’
| Leeuwgat Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{USS|Kittiwake}}
|
| West Bay, Grand Cayman
| Cayman Islands
|-
| {{SS|Lusitania||2}}
| S34°23.40’ E018°29.65’
| Bellows Rock, Cape Point
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMCS|Mackenzie|DDE 261|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{SS|Maori||2}}
| S34°02.062’ E018°18.793’
| Leeuwgat Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
|'''[[MS Zenobia]]'''
| N 34°53.5’ E 33°39.1’
|[[Larnaca]]
|[[Cyprus]]
|-
| {{HMCS|Nipigon|DDH 266|6}}
|
| Quebec
| Canada
|-
| {{SS|Oakburn||2}}
| S34°02.216’ E018°18.573’
| Leeuwgat Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{USS|Oriskany|CV-34|6}}<ref name="Barnette"/>
|
| Florida
| United States
|-
| {{ship|MFV|Orotava}}
| S34°15.998’ E018°28.774’
| Smitswinkel Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| ''Oro Verde''<ref name="Aquaexp"/>
|
|
| Cayman Islands
|-
| ''[[P29 Patrol Boat]]''
|
| [[Ċirkewwa]]
| Malta
|-
| [[P87]]
|
| Simon's Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMAS|Perth|D 38|6}}<ref name="RAN Perth"/>
|
| [[Albany, Western Australia]]
| Australia
|-
| [[HMS Pelorus|SAS ''Pietermaritzburg'']]
| S34°13.300’ E018° 28.452’
| [[Miller's Point, Western Cape]] near [[Simon’s Town]]
| South Africa
|-
| {{ship|MFV|Princess Elizabeth}}
| S34°16.068’ E018°28.839’
| Smitswinkel Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| ''[[Quarry Barge]]''
| S34°09.395’ E018°26.474’
| Glencairn, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{USS|Rankin|AKA-103|6}}
|
| [[Stuart, Florida]]
| United States
|-
| {{MV|Rockeater||2}}
| S34°16.127’ E018°28.890’
| Smitswinkel Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Romelia||2}}
| S34°00.700’ E018°19.860’
| Llandudno, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Rozi||2}}
|
| [[Ċirkewwa]]
| Malta
|-
| {{SS|SA Seafarer||2}}
| S33°53.80’ E018°23.80’
| Mouille Point, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMCS|Saskatchewan|DDE 262|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{USS|Scrimmage|AM-297|6}} (MS Mahi)
|
| [[Waianae]], Hawaii
| United States
|-
| {{HMS|Scylla|F71|6}}
|
| [[Whitsand Bay|Whitsand Bay, Cornwall]]
| United Kingdom
|-
| {{USS|Spiegel Grove|LSD-32|6}}<ref name="spiegelgrove"/>
|
| Florida
| United States
|-
| ''[[Stanegarth]]''
|
| [[Stoney Cove]]
| United Kingdom
|-
| {{SS|Star of Africa||2}}
|
| Albatross Rock, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
|[[SS Thistlegorm]]
|
|[[Ras Muhammad]], [[Red Sea]]
|Egypt
|-
| {{HMAS|Swan|DE 50|6}}<ref name="RAN Swan"/>
|
| [[Dunsborough, Western Australia]]
| Australia
|-
| ''T-Barge''
|
| Durban
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMNZS|Tui|1970|6}}
|
| Tutukaka Heads
| New Zealand
|-
| ''[[Um El Faroud]]''
|
| Qrendi
| Malta
|-
| {{SS|Thomas T. Tucker||2}}
|
| Olifantsbospunt, Cape peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{SAS|Transvaal}}
| S33°16.005’ E018°28.761’
| Smitswinkel Bay
| South Africa
|-
| [[IMO 8011251|MV ''Treasure'']]
| S 33°40.30’ E 18°19.90’
| Koeberg
| South Africa
|-
| {{SS|Umhlali||2}}
| S34°16.435' E18°22.487'
| Olifantsbospunt, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMNZS|Waikato|F55|6}}
|
| Tutukaka
| New Zealand
|-
| {{HMNZS|Wellington|F69|6}}
|
| Wellington
| New Zealand
|-
| "Wreck Alley" – The ''Marie L'', The ''Pat'' and The ''Beata''<ref name="DiveBVI"/>
|
|
| British Virgin Islands
|-
| [[Wreck Alley]]
|
| [[San Diego]], [[California]]
| United States
|-
| Xihwu Boeing 737<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{HMCS|Yukon|DDE 263|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| San Diego, California
| United States
|-
|'''USAT Liberty'''<ref>{{Cite web|title = DailyDive.com - Scuba Diving Community|url = http://www.dailydive.com|website = DailyDive|accessdate = 2015-11-19}}</ref>
|
|Tulamben, Bali
|Indonesia
|}
===Reef dive sites===
{{see also|List of reefs}}
Coral reef areas
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Region/reef system name
! Location
! Country/Territory
|-
|[[Belize Barrier Reef]]
|Caribbean
|Belize
|-
|[[Chuuk State|Chuuk]]
|South western Pacific Ocean
|Federated States of Micronesia
|-
|[[Great Barrier Reef]]
|Queensland
|Australia
|-
|[[Hurghada]]
|Red Sea, Indian Ocean
|Egypt
|-
|[[John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park]]
|Florida
|United States
|-
|[[Marsa Alam]] <!--25°04′N 34°54′E / 25.067°N 34.9°E / 25.067; 34.9-->
|Red Sea, Indian Ocean
|Egypt
|-
|[[Diving in the Maldives]]
|Indian Ocean
|Maldives
|-
|[[Ras Muhammad National Park]]
|Red Sea
|Egypt
|-
|[[Diving in Thailand]]
|Indian Ocean, South east Asia
|Thailand
|-
| [[Sodwana Bay]]
| Indian Ocean
| South Africa
|}
=== Rocky reefs ===
* [[Inland Sea, Gozo]] Malta
* [[Poor Knights Islands]], North Island, New Zealand.
* [[Table Mountain National Park Marine Protected Area]], Atlantic Ocean, near Cape Town, Western Cape province, South Africa
* [[Tsitsikamma National Park]] Marine Protected Area, Indian Ocean, Eastern Cape province, South Africa
===Cave dive sites===
{{see also|Cave diving}}
Cave diving is underwater diving in water-filled caves. It may be considered an extreme sport. The equipment used varies depending on the circumstances, and ranges from breath hold to surface supplied, but almost all cave diving is done using scuba equipment, often in specialised configurations. Recreational cave diving is generally considered to be a type of technical diving due to the lack of a free surface during large parts of the dive, and often involves decompression.
* [[Boesmansgat]], Mpumalanga, South Africa
* [[Sistema Dos Ojos]], Yucatán, Mexico
* [[Sistema Nohoch Nah Chich]], Yucatán, Mexico
* [[Sistema Ox Bel Ha]] Yucatán, Mexico
* [[Sistema Sac Actun]], Yucatán, Mexico
* [[Zacatón]], Mexico
==Quarry dive sites==
[[File:Wazee 007.jpg|thumb|right|[[Wazee Lake]] near [[Black River Falls, Wisconsin]] is a former iron mining quarry now used for scuba diving and other uses.]]
'''Scuba diving quarries''' are depleted or abandoned [[Quarry|rock quarries]] that have been allowed to fill with ground water, and rededicated to the purpose of [[scuba diving]].<ref name="padi.com">http://www.padi.com/scuba/default.aspx</ref>
They may offer deep, clean, clear, still, fresh water with excellent visibility, or low visibility in turbid water from surface runoff. They have no currents or undertow. They are often used as [[Diver training|training]] sites for new divers, where classes and [[Diving certification|certification]] dives are carried out.<ref name="padi.com"/>
Quarries used for scuba diving may be stocked with fish, and often feature contrived “wreck” sites, such as sunken boats, cars, and aircraft for divers to explore while diving. Many have a [[Dive center|dive shop]] on site to rent out equipment and sell [[Diving air compressor|air fills]] and diving equipment. Lodging or camping areas may be available on site.<ref>http://www.divessi.com/</ref>
Quarries in stone may have clear water, with greater visibility than in many inland lakes. Ground water is the primary source of the water that fills these quarries once they are no longer pumped out for mining operations. Many quarry mining operations are located in areas where filling from other, less clean sources, such as rivers and surface runoff of rainwater is not as likely.
Over time, most quarries tend to be contaminated with erosion products and nutrients from surface runoff, causing many to develop a green tint due to algae growth, and accumulations of silt on the bottoms and other surfaces.
Fresh water scuba diving does not require much difference in equipment from diving in the sea. Water temperatures generally decrease as depth increases, and may be as low as {{convert|4|C|F}} at depth. In those temperatures [[dry suit]] diving is recommended,<ref>p.a.d.i. diving manual</ref> but in warmer temperatures, wetsuits may be sufficient. Diving in clean fresh water generally requires less post dive maintenance.<ref>http://www.huronscuba.com/diveInfo/documents/definitions/basicScubaDivingEquipment.html</ref>
The operators of scuba diving quarries may add objects or debris fields to the bottom of the quarry for divers to explore while scuba diving. Mostly these are man made objects such as boats, cars, and trucks. Some quarries have such large objects as school buses, small buildings, or commercial airliners on the bottom. These sites may be mapped out and marked with guide lines under the water, particularly if visibility is poor.<ref>http://www.divegilboa.com/</ref><ref>http://www.portagequarry.com/</ref><ref>http://www.whitestarquarry.com</ref><ref>https://diveinaustralia.com.au/hmas-brisbane-shipwreck-mooloolaba-sunshine-coast</ref>
The owners or operators of quarries may stock the quarry with fish to provide entertainment for divers. These are commonly the same species of fish that thrive naturally in local lakes and rivers, but some quarries are stocked with more exotic fish. The ecology is usually very limited.
===Examples===
*[[Dutch Springs]], [[Bethlehem, Pennsylvania]]
* [[Wazee Lake]], [[Black River Falls, Wisconsin]]
* [http://www.underwaterminnesota.com/index_files/Page1087.htm Quarry Park], [[St. Cloud, Minnesota]]
* [[Portsmouth Mine Pit Lake]] and [[Cuyuna Country State Recreation Area]], near [[Crosby, Minnesota]]
* [[Stoney Cove]], between [[Stoney Stanton]] and [[Sapcote]] in [[Leicestershire]]
* [[Dosthill#Leisure|Dosthill quarry]], near [[Tamworth, Staffordshire|Tamworth]], [[Staffordshire]]
* [[National Diving and Activity Centre]], at [[Tidenham]], [[Gloucestershire]]
<!-- [[Nantlle Valley#Dorothea Quarry]], [[Eccleston Quarry]], etc. – How many of these are appropriate here? -->
==References==
{{Reflist |refs=
<ref name="ADMezine1">{{cite journal |author1=Williams, Chris |author2=Bowen, Linda |title=Wrecks of the Duane and Bibb |journal=Advanced Diver Magazine Ezine |issue=1, reprinted from ADM issue 4 |pages=62–72 |year=2008 |url=http://www.advanceddivermagazine.com/ADMEZINE/Issues/admezineissue1.pdf |accessdate=2009-06-04}}</ref>
<ref name="Africa Geographic" >{{cite web|url=https://africageographic.com/blog/five-top-dive-sites-in-south-africa/ |title=Five top dive sites in South Africa |date=4 June 2015 |author=Your African Safari |publisher=Africa Geographic }}</ref>
<ref name="Aquaexp">{{cite web|url=http://www.aquaexplorers.com/cayman_shipwrecks.htm |title=The Cayman Islands Shipwreck Expo Directory Capt. Dan Berg's Guide to Shipwrecks information |publisher=Aquaexplorers.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="artificialreef">{{cite web |url=http://www.artificialreef.bc.ca |title=ARSBC |publisher=Artificial Reef Society of British Columbia |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="Barnette">{{cite book |author=[[Michael C. Barnette|Barnette, Michael C.]] |title=[[Florida's Shipwrecks]] |year=2008 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |isbn=978-0-7385-5413-6}}</ref>
<ref name="Buccaneer">{{cite web|url=http://www.buccaneerdiving.com |title=5 Star PADI IDC Centre, Kenya, Zanzibar |publisher=Buccaneer Diving |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="BVI Inganess">{{cite web|url=http://www.bvidiving.com/divesites_inganess_bay.html |title=BVI Dive Site: Wreck of the Inganess Bay |publisher=Bvidiving.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="Charlie Brown">{{cite web|url=http://www.goldenrockdive.com/cb.htm|title=Charlie Brown Artificial Reef|publisher=Golden Rock Dive Center |date= |accessdate=2011-06-07}}</ref>
<ref name="CoP Inshore 2017">{{cite book|url=http://us-cdn.creamermedia.co.za/assets/articles/attachments/71948_41237_gon1235.pdf |title=NO. 1235 Occupational Health and Safety Act, 1993: Diving regulations: Inclusion of code of practice inshore diving 41237. Code of Practice Inshore Diving |last=Diving Advisory Board|publisher=Department of Labour, Republic of South Africa |date=10 November 2017 |pages=72–139 }}</ref>
<ref name="CoP Scientific">{{cite book |url=http://www.labour.gov.za/DOL/downloads/documents/useful-documents/occupational-health-and-safety/scientificdiving2014.pdf |title=Code Of Practice for Scientific Diving|last=Diving Advisory Board |publisher=The South African Department of Labour |accessdate=16 September 2016 |location=Pretoria}}</ref>
<ref name="DiveBVI">{{cite web|url=http://www.divebvi.com/cooper_island.htm |title=Cooper Island |publisher=Dive BVI |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="Lexicon" >{{cite web|url=http://www.iadclexicon.org/dive-site/ |title=Drilling Lexicon |publisher=IADC |accessdate=24 December 2018 }}</ref>
<ref name="Nova Scotia" >{{cite book|url=https://novascotia.ca/lae/healthandsafety/docs/OccupationalDivingRegGuideSeafood.pdf |title=A Guide to the Occupational Diving Regulations for the Seafood Harvesting Industry |chapter=Dive Site and Dive Base |publisher=Nova Scotia Environment and Labour Occupational Health and Safety Division |date= |page=4 }}</ref>
<ref name="Ontario" >{{cite book|title=Ontario Regulation 629/94, Amended to O. Reg. 155/04 Diving Operations |chapter=Definitions||date= |publisher= |url=http://www.ihsa.ca/webhelp/Diving_Regulation/Definitions.htm }}</ref>
<ref name="RAN Perth">{{cite web|url=http://www.navy.gov.au/hmas-perth-ii |title=HMAS Perth (II) - Royal Australian Navy |publisher=Navy.gov.au |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="RAN Swan">{{cite web|url=http://www.navy.gov.au/hmas-swan-iii |title=HMAS Swan (III) - Royal Australian Navy |publisher=Navy.gov.au |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="spiegelgrove">{{cite web|url=http://fla-keys.com/spiegelgrove/ |title=The ''Spiegel Grove'' is believed to be the largest ever wreck deliberately sunk as a diving site |publisher=Fla-keys.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="Vandenberg">{{cite news |agency=Associated Press |title=Vandenberg sinking this morning |publisher=MSNBC |date=2009-05-27 |url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30958675 |accessdate=2009-05-28}}</ref>
}}
==External links==
{{Wikivoyage|Scuba diving}}
{{commonscat-inline|Underwater diving sites}}
{{Underwater diving}}
[[Category:Underwater diving sites| ]]' |
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext ) | '{{short description|Specific places that recreational divers go to enjoy the underwater environment or are used for training purposes}}
{{Redirect|Underwater diving sites|the main article about the activity|Recreational diving}}
[[File:Coral - Marsa Alam, Egypt - August 12, 2011.jpg |thumb| Recreational diver over a coral reef in the Red Sea]]
'''Recreational dive sites''' are specific places that recreational [[scuba diver]]s go to enjoy the underwater environment. They include recreational [[diver training]] sites and [[technical diving]] sites beyond the range generally accepted for [[recreational diving]]. In this context all diving done for recreational purposes is included. [[Professional diving]] tends to be done where the job is, and with the exception of the recreational diving service industry, does not generally occur at specific sites chosen for their easy access, pleasant conditions or interesting features.
Recreational dive sites may be found in a wide range of bodies of water, and may be popular for various reasons, including accessibility, biodiversity, spectacular topography, historical interest and artifacts (such as shipwrecks), and water clarity. Tropical waters of high biodiversity and colourful sea life are popular recreational diving vacation destinations. South-east Asia, the Caribbean islands, the Red Sea and the Great Barrier Reef of Australia are regions where the clear, warm, waters and colourful and diverse sea life have made recreational diving an economically important tourist industry.
Recreational divers may accept a relatively high level of risk to dive at a site perceived to be of special interest. [[Wreck diving]] and [[cave diving]] have their adherents, and enthusiasts will endure considerable hardship, risk and expense to visit caves and wrecks where few have been before. Some sites are popular almost exclusively for their convenience for training and practice of skills, such as flooded quarries. They are generally found where more interesting and pleasant diving is not locally available, or may only be accessible when weather or water conditions permit.
==Dive site==
The term ''dive site'' is used differently depending on context. In professional diving in some regions it may refer to the surface worksite from which the diving operation is supported and controlled by the diving supervisor. This may alternatively be called the diving operation control site, dive base, or control point. The professional dive site may also legally include the underwater work site and the area between the surface control area and underwater work site.<ref name="CoP Inshore 2017" /><ref name="CoP Scientific" /><ref name="Lexicon" /><ref name="Ontario" /><ref name="Nova Scotia" /> In recreational diving it generally refers to the underwater environment of a dive. Where a site is named, it generally refers to the locality around a specific feature, which may be reasonably conveniently visited during a dive centred or focused on that feature. Conventions may vary regionally. In some places a named dive site may refer to a specific route with a given starting point, in others it may refer more loosely to a larger region which is far bigger than a diver could reasonably visit on dives with a common point.<ref name="Africa Geographic" /> Such regions may later be specified in more detail as they become better known, and what was originally referred to a single site may become several sites when they are described. Where a site is named for a shipwreck, it generally refers to the known extent of the wreckage, regardless of size. Synonyms include dive spot, dive location and diving site.
===Names of sites===
Names for the sites themselves range from descriptive through quixotic to pretentious, as they are chosen at the whim of whoever dives there and names the site. There is often no standardisation, and the same site may be known by different names to different divers. Few sites are reliably mapped or have a published description with an accurate position, and many of these are caves or wrecks of identified ships.
===Rating of sites===
Sites are generally rated by people who do not have an exhaustive experience of the full range of sites throughout the world, and preferences differ. It is unlikely that any published ratings are unbiased. Conditions at most sites vary from day to day, often considerably, depending on various factors, particularly recent weather.
==Bodies of water commonly used for recreational diving==
* [[Sea]] and [[Ocean]] [[coastline|shorelines]] and [[shoals]]. These are salt water sites and may support high [[biodiversity]] of [[plant]] and [[animal]] life forms. [[Shipwrecks]] are also common on some coasts, and are very popular attractions for a large number of divers.
* [[Lake]]s, usually containing fresh water. Large lakes have many features of seas including wrecks and a variety of aquatic life. Artificial lakes, such as [[clay pit]]s, [[gravel pit]]s, and [[quarries]] often have lower visibility. Some lakes are at high altitude and may require special considerations for [[altitude diving]].
* Abandoned and flooded quarries are popular in inland areas for diver training and sometimes also recreational diving. Rock quarries may have reasonable underwater visibility if there is not so much mud or silt to cause low visibility. As they are not natural environments and usually privately owned, quarries often contain features intentionally placed for divers to explore, such as sunken boats, automobiles, aircraft, and abandoned machinery and structures. Flooded mines may provide the equivalent of flooded caves with an [[overhead environment]], though generally with a known extent.
* [[River]]s generally contain fresh water but are often shallow and murky and may have strong currents.
* [[Caves]] containing water provide exotic and interesting, though relatively hazardous, opportunities for [[cave diving|exploration]].
==Popular features of dive sites==
[[File:Coral reef locations.jpg|thumb|upright=2|[[NASA]] image [http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/coralreef_image.html] showing locations of significant [[coral reef]]s, which are often sought out by divers for their abundant, diverse life forms.]]
There are a wide range of [[underwater]] features which may contribute to the popularity of a dive site:
* Accessibility is important, but not critical. Some divers will travel long distances at considerable cost to get to a site with exceptional features.
* Biodiversity at the site: Popular examples are [[coral]], [[sea sponge|sponge]]s, [[fish]], [[sting ray]]s, [[mollusc]]s, [[cetacea]]ns, [[Pinniped|seal]]s, [[shark]]s and [[crustacean]]s.
* The Topography of the site: [[Coral reef]]s, walls (underwater [[cliff]]s), rocky [[reef]]s, gullies, [[cave]]s, overhangs and swim-throughs (short tunnels or arches) can be spectacular. Terminology for the topography of dive sites is generally consistent with oceanographic practice, with occasional more eccentric usage.
* Historical or cultural items at the site: [[Shipwreck]]s, sunken [[aircraft]] and archaeological sites, apart from their historical value, form artificial [[habitat (ecology)|habitats]] for marine life making them more attractive as dive sites.
* Underwater [[visibility]]: This can vary widely between sites and with time and other conditions. Poor visibility is caused by suspended particles in the water, such as [[mud]], [[silt]], suspended [[organic matter]] and plankton. Currents and surge can stir up the particles. Rainfall runoff can carry particulate matter from the shore. Diving close to the sediments on the bottom can result in the particles being kicked up by the divers fins. Sites which generally have good visibility are preferred, but poor visibility will often be tolerated if the site is sufficiently attractive for other reasons.
* Water temperature: Warm water diving is comfortable and convenient, and requires less equipment. Although cold water is uncomfortable and can cause [[hypothermia]] it can be interesting because different species of underwater life thrive in cold conditions.
* Currents and [[tide|tidal flow]]s can transport [[nutrient]]s to underwater environments increasing the variety and density of life at a site. Currents can also be dangerous to divers as they can carry the diver being away from the surface support or the planned exit point. Currents that flow over large obstructions can cause strong local vertical currents and turbulence that are dangerous because they may cause the diver to lose [[buoyancy]] control risking [[barotrauma]], or impact against the bottom terrain.
==Regions where recreational diving is a major tourist industry==
*[[Great Barrier Reef]] of [[Australia]]{{cn|date=December 2018}}
*[[Apo Island]] in the [[Philippines]]{{cn|date=December 2018}}
==Regions of notable biodiversity==
===Temperate===
[[File:Dive sites of Cape Town.png|thumb|upright=1.5|Recreational dive sites of the greater Cape Town region. The yellow lines indicate the boundary of the Table Mountain National Park MPA.]]
[[File:Marine Bioregions of the South African EEZ.png|thumb|Marine bioregions of the South African coast]]
The [[Table Mountain National Park Marine Protected Area]]<!--proper name--> around the [[Cape Peninsula]] is a popular diving region in the vicinity of [[Cape Town]], [[South Africa]], with more than 200 named dive sites, many of which have been surveyed and mapped. The Cape Peninsula marks the boundary between the cool temperate [[Marine ecoregions of the South African exclusive economic zone#West coast|Benguela ecoregion]], which extends from [[Namibia]] to [[Cape Point]], and is dominated by the cold [[Benguela Current]], and the warm temperate [[Agulhas ecoregion]] to the east of Cape Point which extends eastwards to the [[Mbashe River]]. The break at Cape Point is very distinct in the inshore depth ranges, and the waters of the east and west sides of the peninsula support noticeably different ecologies, though there is a significant overlap of [[List of marine animals of the Cape Peninsula and False Bay|resident organisms]]. There are a large proportion of species endemic to South Africa along this coastline.
===Tropical===
*[[Great Barrier Reef]]
*[[Indonesia]]
*[[Red Sea#Tourism|The Red Sea]]
*[[Caribbean Sea]]
==Dive sites of unique or exceptional interest==
===Wreck dive sites===
{{see also|Wreck diving}}
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Vessel Name
! Position
! Location
! Country/Territory
|-
| {{MV|Adolphus Busch||2}}
|
| [[Looe Key]], Florida
| United States
|-
| {{USS|Arthur W. Radford|DD-968|6}}
|
| [[Cape May]], New Jersey
| United States
|-
| {{HMAS|Adelaide|FFG 01|6}}
|
| [[Avoca Beach]], New South Wales
| Australia
|-
| {{MV|Antipolis||2}}
| S33°59.06’ E018°21.37’
| Oudekraal, [[Cape Town]]
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Aster||2}}
| S34°03.891’ E018°20.955’
| Hout Bay, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
|{{RMS|Athens}}
| S33°53.85’ E018°24.57’
| Mouille Point, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{HNLMS|Bato}}
| S34°10.998’ E018°25.560’
| Simon's Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{SS|Bia||2}}
| S34°16'12.7" E018°22'38.3"
| Olifantsbospunt, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{USCGC|Bibb|WPG-31|6}}<ref name="ADMezine1"/>
|
| Florida
| United States
|-
| {{SAS|Bloemfontein}}
| S34°14.655’ E018°39.952’
| False Bay, Western Cape
| South Africa
|-
| ''[[Barge Boss 400]]''
| S34°02.216’ E018°18.573’
| Leeuwgat Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMAS|Brisbane|D 41|6}}
|
| [[Mooloolaba]], Queensland
| Australia
|-
| {{ship|East Indiaman|Brunswick}}
| S34°10.880’ E018°25.607’
| Simon's Town, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMAS|Canberra|FFG 02|6}}
|
| Barwon Heads, Victoria
| Australia
|-
| {{HMNZS|Canterbury|F421|6}}
|
| [[Bay of Islands]]
| New Zealand
|-
| {{HMCS|Cape Breton|ARE 100|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{SS|Cape Matapan||2}}
| S34°53.233' E018°24.533'
| Table Bay, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Captain Keith Tibbetts||2}}
|
| Cayman Brac
| Cayman Islands
|-
| {{ship|CS|Charles L Brown}}<ref name="Charlie Brown"/>
|
| Sint Eustatius
| Leeward Islands
|-
| {{HMCS|Chaudière|DDE 235|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{SS|Clan Monroe||2}}
| S34°08.817' E18°18.949'
| Kommetjie, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{SS|Clan Stuart||2}}
| S34°10.303’ E018°25.842’
| Simon's Town, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMCS|Columbia|DDE 260|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{USCGC|Cuyahoga|WIX-157|6}}
|
| [[Virginia Capes]]
| United States
|-
| {{ship|Australian Army ship|Crusader|AV 2767|6}}
|
| [[Flinders Reef]] off [[Cape Moreton]], [[Queensland]]
| Australia
|-
| {{MV|Daeyang Family||2}}
|
| Robben Island, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Dania||2}}<ref name="Buccaneer"/>
|
| Mombasa
| Kenya
|-
| [[HMS Barbrake|SAS ''Fleur'']]
| S34°10.832’ E018°33.895’
| False Bay, Western Cape
| South Africa
|-
| {{USCGC|Duane|WPG-33|6}}<ref name="ADMezine1"/>
|
| Florida
| United States
|-
| Fontao
|
| Durban
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|G.B. Church||2}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{SAS|Gelderland}}
| S34°02.070’ E018°18.180’
| Leeuwgat Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Gemsbok||2}}
|
| Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| [[HMS Thames|SATS ''General Botha'']]
| S34°13.679’ E018°38.290’
| False Bay
| South Africa
|-
| [[USNS General Hoyt S. Vandenberg (T-AGM-10)|USNS ''General Hoyt S. Vandenberg'' (T-AGM-10)]]<ref name="Vandenberg"/>
|
| Key West, Florida
| United States
|-
| ''[[Glen Strathallan]]''
|
| [[Plymouth]]
| United Kingdom
|-
| {{SAS|Good Hope}}
| S34°16.054’ E018°28.850’
| Smitswinkel Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMAS|Hobart|D 39|6}}
|
| [[Yankalilla Bay]], South Australia
| Australia
|-
| {{ship|VOIC ship|Het Huis te Kraaiestein}}
| S33°58.85’ E018°21.65’
| Oudekraal, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{ship|Barque|Highfields}}
| S33°53’07.9” E18°25’49.8”
| Table Bay, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{SS|Hypatia||2}}
| S33°50.10’ E018°22.90’
| Robben Island, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| ''Inganess Bay''<ref name="BVI Inganess"/>
|
|
| British Virgin Islands
|-
|[[Jura (ship, 1854)|Jura]]
|
|Lake Constance
|Switzerland
|-
| {{MV|Katsu Maru||2}}
| S34°03.903’ E018°20.949’
| Hout Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Keryavor and the Jo May||2}}
| S34°02.037’ E018°18.636’
| Leeuwgat Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{USS|Kittiwake}}
|
| West Bay, Grand Cayman
| Cayman Islands
|-
| {{SS|Lusitania||2}}
| S34°23.40’ E018°29.65’
| Bellows Rock, Cape Point
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMCS|Mackenzie|DDE 261|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{SS|Maori||2}}
| S34°02.062’ E018°18.793’
| Leeuwgat Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
|'''[[MS Zenobia]]'''
| N 34°53.5’ E 33°39.1’
|[[Larnaca]]
|[[Cyprus]]
|-
| {{HMCS|Nipigon|DDH 266|6}}
|
| Quebec
| Canada
|-
| {{SS|Oakburn||2}}
| S34°02.216’ E018°18.573’
| Leeuwgat Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{USS|Oriskany|CV-34|6}}<ref name="Barnette"/>
|
| Florida
| United States
|-
| {{ship|MFV|Orotava}}
| S34°15.998’ E018°28.774’
| Smitswinkel Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| ''Oro Verde''<ref name="Aquaexp"/>
|
|
| Cayman Islands
|-
| ''[[P29 Patrol Boat]]''
|
| [[Ċirkewwa]]
| Malta
|-
| [[P87]]
|
| Simon's Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMAS|Perth|D 38|6}}<ref name="RAN Perth"/>
|
| [[Albany, Western Australia]]
| Australia
|-
| [[HMS Pelorus|SAS ''Pietermaritzburg'']]
| S34°13.300’ E018° 28.452’
| [[Miller's Point, Western Cape]] near [[Simon’s Town]]
| South Africa
|-
| {{ship|MFV|Princess Elizabeth}}
| S34°16.068’ E018°28.839’
| Smitswinkel Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| ''[[Quarry Barge]]''
| S34°09.395’ E018°26.474’
| Glencairn, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{USS|Rankin|AKA-103|6}}
|
| [[Stuart, Florida]]
| United States
|-
| {{MV|Rockeater||2}}
| S34°16.127’ E018°28.890’
| Smitswinkel Bay, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Romelia||2}}
| S34°00.700’ E018°19.860’
| Llandudno, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{MV|Rozi||2}}
|
| [[Ċirkewwa]]
| Malta
|-
| {{SS|SA Seafarer||2}}
| S33°53.80’ E018°23.80’
| Mouille Point, Cape Town
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMCS|Saskatchewan|DDE 262|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{USS|Scrimmage|AM-297|6}} (MS Mahi)
|
| [[Waianae]], Hawaii
| United States
|-
| {{HMS|Scylla|F71|6}}
|
| [[Whitsand Bay|Whitsand Bay, Cornwall]]
| United Kingdom
|-
| {{USS|Spiegel Grove|LSD-32|6}}<ref name="spiegelgrove"/>
|
| Florida
| United States
|-
| ''[[Stanegarth]]''
|
| [[Stoney Cove]]
| United Kingdom
|-
| {{SS|Star of Africa||2}}
|
| Albatross Rock, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
|[[SS Thistlegorm]]
|
|[[Ras Muhammad]], [[Red Sea]]
|Egypt
|-
| {{HMAS|Swan|DE 50|6}}<ref name="RAN Swan"/>
|
| [[Dunsborough, Western Australia]]
| Australia
|-
| ''T-Barge''
|
| Durban
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMNZS|Tui|1970|6}}
|
| Tutukaka Heads
| New Zealand
|-
| ''[[Um El Faroud]]''
|
| Qrendi
| Malta
|-
| {{SS|Thomas T. Tucker||2}}
|
| Olifantsbospunt, Cape peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{SAS|Transvaal}}
| S33°16.005’ E018°28.761’
| Smitswinkel Bay
| South Africa
|-
| [[IMO 8011251|MV ''Treasure'']]
| S 33°40.30’ E 18°19.90’
| Koeberg
| South Africa
|-
| {{SS|Umhlali||2}}
| S34°16.435' E18°22.487'
| Olifantsbospunt, Cape Peninsula
| South Africa
|-
| {{HMNZS|Waikato|F55|6}}
|
| Tutukaka
| New Zealand
|-
| {{HMNZS|Wellington|F69|6}}
|
| Wellington
| New Zealand
|-
| "Wreck Alley" – The ''Marie L'', The ''Pat'' and The ''Beata''<ref name="DiveBVI"/>
|
|
| British Virgin Islands
|-
| [[Wreck Alley]]
|
| [[San Diego]], [[California]]
| United States
|-
| Xihwu Boeing 737<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| British Columbia
| Canada
|-
| {{HMCS|Yukon|DDE 263|6}}<ref name="artificialreef"/>
|
| San Diego, California
| United States
|-
|'''USAT Liberty'''<ref>{{Cite web|title = DailyDive.com - Scuba Diving Community|url = http://www.dailydive.com|website = DailyDive|accessdate = 2015-11-19}}</ref>
|
|Tulamben, Bali
|Indonesia
|}
===Reef dive sites===
{{see also|List of reefs}}
Coral reef areas
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Region/reef system name
! Location
! Country/Territory
|-
|[[Belize Barrier Reef]]
|Caribbean
|Belize
|-
|[[Chuuk State|Chuuk]]
|South western Pacific Ocean
|Federated States of Micronesia
|-
|[[Great Barrier Reef]]
|Queensland
|Australia
|-
|[[Hurghada]]
|Red Sea, Indian Ocean
|Egypt
|-
|[[John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park]]
|Florida
|United States
|-
|[[Marsa Alam]] <!--25°04′N 34°54′E / 25.067°N 34.9°E / 25.067; 34.9-->
|Red Sea, Indian Ocean
|Egypt
|-
|[[Diving in the Maldives]]
|Indian Ocean
|Maldives
|-
|[[Ras Muhammad National Park]]
|Red Sea
|Egypt
|-
|[[Diving in Thailand]]
|Indian Ocean, South east Asia
|Thailand
|-
| [[Sodwana Bay]]
| Indian Ocean
| South Africa
|}
=== Rocky reefs ===
* [[Inland Sea, Gozo]] Malta
* [[Poor Knights Islands]], North Island, New Zealand.
* [[Table Mountain National Park Marine Protected Area]], Atlantic Ocean, near Cape Town, Western Cape province, South Africa
* [[Tsitsikamma National Park]] Marine Protected Area, Indian Ocean, Eastern Cape province, South Africa
===Cave dive sites===
{{see also|Cave diving}}
Cave diving is underwater diving in water-filled caves. It may be considered an extreme sport. The equipment used varies depending on the circumstances, and ranges from breath hold to surface supplied, but almost all cave diving is done using scuba equipment, often in specialised configurations. Recreational cave diving is generally considered to be a type of technical diving due to the lack of a free surface during large parts of the dive, and often involves decompression.
* [[Boesmansgat]], Mpumalanga, South Africa
* [[Sistema Dos Ojos]], Yucatán, Mexico
* [[Sistema Nohoch Nah Chich]], Yucatán, Mexico
* [[Sistema Ox Bel Ha]] Yucatán, Mexico
* [[Sistema Sac Actun]], Yucatán, Mexico
* [[Zacatón]], Mexico
==Quarry dive sites==
[[File:Wazee 007.jpg|thumb|right|[[Wazee Lake]] near [[Black River Falls, Wisconsin]] is a former iron mining quarry now used for scuba diving and other uses.]]
'''Scuba diving quarries''' are depleted or abandoned [[Quarry|rock quarries]] that have been allowed to fill with ground water, and rededicated to the purpose of [[scuba diving]].<ref name="padi.com">http://www.padi.com/scuba/default.aspx</ref>
They may offer deep, clean, clear, still, fresh water with excellent visibility, or low visibility in turbid water from surface runoff. They have no currents or undertow. They are often used as [[Diver training|training]] sites for new divers, where classes and [[Diving certification|certification]] dives are carried out.<ref name="padi.com"/>
Quarries used for scuba diving may be stocked with fish, and often feature contrived “wreck” sites, such as sunken boats, cars, and aircraft for divers to explore while diving. Many have a [[Dive center|dive shop]] on site to rent out equipment and sell [[Diving air compressor|air fills]] and diving equipment. Lodging or camping areas may be available on site.<ref>http://www.divessi.com/</ref>
Quarries in stone may have clear water, with greater visibility than in many inland lakes. Ground water is the primary source of the water that fills these quarries once they are no longer pumped out for mining operations. Many quarry mining operations are located in areas where filling from other, less clean sources, such as rivers and surface runoff of rainwater is not as likely.
Over time, most quarries tend to be contaminated with erosion products and nutrients from surface runoff, causing many to develop a green tint due to algae growth, and accumulations of silt on the bottoms and other surfaces.
Fresh water scuba diving does not require much difference in equipment from diving in the sea. Water temperatures generally decrease as depth increases, and may be as low as {{convert|4|C|F}} at depth. In those temperatures [[dry suit]] diving is recommended,<ref>p.a.d.i. diving manual</ref> but in warmer temperatures, wetsuits may be sufficient. Diving in clean fresh water generally requires less post dive maintenance.<ref>http://www.huronscuba.com/diveInfo/documents/definitions/basicScubaDivingEquipment.html</ref>
The operators of scuba diving quarries may add objects or debris fields to the bottom of the quarry for divers to explore while scuba diving. Mostly these are man made objects such as boats, cars, and trucks. Some quarries have such large objects as school buses, small buildings, or commercial airliners on the bottom. These sites may be mapped out and marked with guide lines under the water, particularly if visibility is poor.<ref>http://www.divegilboa.com/</ref><ref>http://www.portagequarry.com/</ref><ref>http://www.whitestarquarry.com</ref><ref>https://diveinaustralia.com.au/hmas-brisbane-shipwreck-mooloolaba-sunshine-coast</ref>
The owners or operators of quarries may stock the quarry with fish to provide entertainment for divers. These are commonly the same species of fish that thrive naturally in local lakes and rivers, but some quarries are stocked with more exotic fish. The ecology is usually very limited.
===Examples===
*[[Dutch Springs]], [[Bethlehem, Pennsylvania]]
* [[Wazee Lake]], [[Black River Falls, Wisconsin]]
* [http://www.underwaterminnesota.com/index_files/Page1087.htm Quarry Park], [[St. Cloud, Minnesota]]
* [[Portsmouth Mine Pit Lake]] and [[Cuyuna Country State Recreation Area]], near [[Crosby, Minnesota]]
* [[Stoney Cove]], between [[Stoney Stanton]] and [[Sapcote]] in [[Leicestershire]]
* [[Dosthill#Leisure|Dosthill quarry]], near [[Tamworth, Staffordshire|Tamworth]], [[Staffordshire]]
* [[National Diving and Activity Centre]], at [[Tidenham]], [[Gloucestershire]]
<!-- [[Nantlle Valley#Dorothea Quarry]], [[Eccleston Quarry]], etc. – How many of these are appropriate here? -->
https://www.infinity2diving.com/diving/packages/silver-cenotes/
==References==
{{Reflist |refs=
<ref name="ADMezine1">{{cite journal |author1=Williams, Chris |author2=Bowen, Linda |title=Wrecks of the Duane and Bibb |journal=Advanced Diver Magazine Ezine |issue=1, reprinted from ADM issue 4 |pages=62–72 |year=2008 |url=http://www.advanceddivermagazine.com/ADMEZINE/Issues/admezineissue1.pdf |accessdate=2009-06-04}}</ref>
<ref name="Africa Geographic" >{{cite web|url=https://africageographic.com/blog/five-top-dive-sites-in-south-africa/ |title=Five top dive sites in South Africa |date=4 June 2015 |author=Your African Safari |publisher=Africa Geographic }}</ref>
<ref name="Aquaexp">{{cite web|url=http://www.aquaexplorers.com/cayman_shipwrecks.htm |title=The Cayman Islands Shipwreck Expo Directory Capt. Dan Berg's Guide to Shipwrecks information |publisher=Aquaexplorers.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="artificialreef">{{cite web |url=http://www.artificialreef.bc.ca |title=ARSBC |publisher=Artificial Reef Society of British Columbia |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="Barnette">{{cite book |author=[[Michael C. Barnette|Barnette, Michael C.]] |title=[[Florida's Shipwrecks]] |year=2008 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |isbn=978-0-7385-5413-6}}</ref>
<ref name="Buccaneer">{{cite web|url=http://www.buccaneerdiving.com |title=5 Star PADI IDC Centre, Kenya, Zanzibar |publisher=Buccaneer Diving |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="BVI Inganess">{{cite web|url=http://www.bvidiving.com/divesites_inganess_bay.html |title=BVI Dive Site: Wreck of the Inganess Bay |publisher=Bvidiving.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="Charlie Brown">{{cite web|url=http://www.goldenrockdive.com/cb.htm|title=Charlie Brown Artificial Reef|publisher=Golden Rock Dive Center |date= |accessdate=2011-06-07}}</ref>
<ref name="CoP Inshore 2017">{{cite book|url=http://us-cdn.creamermedia.co.za/assets/articles/attachments/71948_41237_gon1235.pdf |title=NO. 1235 Occupational Health and Safety Act, 1993: Diving regulations: Inclusion of code of practice inshore diving 41237. Code of Practice Inshore Diving |last=Diving Advisory Board|publisher=Department of Labour, Republic of South Africa |date=10 November 2017 |pages=72–139 }}</ref>
<ref name="CoP Scientific">{{cite book |url=http://www.labour.gov.za/DOL/downloads/documents/useful-documents/occupational-health-and-safety/scientificdiving2014.pdf |title=Code Of Practice for Scientific Diving|last=Diving Advisory Board |publisher=The South African Department of Labour |accessdate=16 September 2016 |location=Pretoria}}</ref>
<ref name="DiveBVI">{{cite web|url=http://www.divebvi.com/cooper_island.htm |title=Cooper Island |publisher=Dive BVI |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="Lexicon" >{{cite web|url=http://www.iadclexicon.org/dive-site/ |title=Drilling Lexicon |publisher=IADC |accessdate=24 December 2018 }}</ref>
<ref name="Nova Scotia" >{{cite book|url=https://novascotia.ca/lae/healthandsafety/docs/OccupationalDivingRegGuideSeafood.pdf |title=A Guide to the Occupational Diving Regulations for the Seafood Harvesting Industry |chapter=Dive Site and Dive Base |publisher=Nova Scotia Environment and Labour Occupational Health and Safety Division |date= |page=4 }}</ref>
<ref name="Ontario" >{{cite book|title=Ontario Regulation 629/94, Amended to O. Reg. 155/04 Diving Operations |chapter=Definitions||date= |publisher= |url=http://www.ihsa.ca/webhelp/Diving_Regulation/Definitions.htm }}</ref>
<ref name="RAN Perth">{{cite web|url=http://www.navy.gov.au/hmas-perth-ii |title=HMAS Perth (II) - Royal Australian Navy |publisher=Navy.gov.au |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="RAN Swan">{{cite web|url=http://www.navy.gov.au/hmas-swan-iii |title=HMAS Swan (III) - Royal Australian Navy |publisher=Navy.gov.au |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="spiegelgrove">{{cite web|url=http://fla-keys.com/spiegelgrove/ |title=The ''Spiegel Grove'' is believed to be the largest ever wreck deliberately sunk as a diving site |publisher=Fla-keys.com |date= |accessdate=2010-08-20}}</ref>
<ref name="Vandenberg">{{cite news |agency=Associated Press |title=Vandenberg sinking this morning |publisher=MSNBC |date=2009-05-27 |url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30958675 |accessdate=2009-05-28}}</ref>
}}
https://www.infinity2diving.com/diving/packages/silver-cenotes/
==External links==
{{Wikivoyage|Scuba diving}}
{{commonscat-inline|Underwater diving sites}}
{{Underwater diving}}
[[Category:Underwater diving sites| ]]' |
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<!-- [[Nantlle Valley#Dorothea Quarry]], [[Eccleston Quarry]], etc. – How many of these are appropriate here? -->
+https://www.infinity2diving.com/diving/packages/silver-cenotes/
==References==
{{Reflist |refs=
@@ -641,4 +642,5 @@
}}
+https://www.infinity2diving.com/diving/packages/silver-cenotes/
==External links==
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