JellyfishCutOut
Wolfgang Pölzer and Barbara Lackner
The best diving waters in Austria 3rd updated and expanded edition
Lawson Wood
Scapa Flow has more shipwrecks and wreckage than any other location in Europe and is regarded as one of the top five wreck diving locations in the World.

Come with us to our NEW FaceBook page

The Crowne Plaza Denver Internation Airport
24 Sep 2010 - 25 Sep 2010
Birmingham, England
16 Oct 2010 - 17 Oct 2010
Marseilles, France
27 Oct 2010 - 31 Oct 2010
Birmingham, England
30 Oct 2010 - 31 Oct 2010
Eilat, Red Sea
8 Nov 2010 - 13 Nov 2010
Las Vegas, Nevada, US
17 Nov 2010 - 24 Nov 2010

Photo & Video Workshops

20 Nov 2010 - 4 Dec 2010
Dive into the crystal clear sacred waters of the Mayas! The extensive cave system lying under the Yucatan Peninsula is like a Swiss cheese, full of holes! And after 180 degree turn you go from fresh to salt water!
20 Nov 2010 - 2 Dec 2010
Come dive the famed reefs of Raja Ampat with Wetpixel! Raja Ampat, Indonesia, is generally considered to be the center of tropical marine biodiversity. Lush, colorful coral reefs are a backdrop for exceptional fish and invertebrate life.
Join Eric Cheng and Alex Mustard in an underwater photography expedition to Alaska in June 11-23, 2011. We'll be aboard the liveaboard dive vessel, the Nautilus Explorer, for 13 days of exploration between Sitka and Ketchikan.
2 Apr 2011 - 8 Apr 2011
DO YOU WANT TO LEARN TO SHOOT SHARKS LIKE A PRO?

Namibia’s first Marine Protected Area (MPA) will be launched this week

The MPA's are going to be a part of the more extensive Namib–Skeleton Coast National Park (NSCNP). In total the NSCNP borders onto over 14 million ha of land and sea that is managed primarily for wildlife biodiversity, conservation and tourism.
  Dav Humphreys/Namibia Tourism - www.fotoseeker.com
Shipwreck on Namibian beach
The Namib–Skeleton Coast National Park (hereafter NSCNP) of coastline, a distance of about 1,570 km, from the Orange River in the south to the Kunene River in the north.

Coastal and Marine Protected Area off the Sperrgebiet and Namib-Naukluft areas, running for 400 km up the coast and about 30 km wide, covering an area of 1.2 million ha and containing all of Namibia’s islands. This enigmatic and poignant coast – the Coast of Skeletons – contains many shipwrecks, the bones of early mariners as well as those of whales and seals.

The proclamation of this protected area represents one of Namibia’s greatest conservation achievements since gaining Independence in 1990, and one of the most exciting developments in the history of conservation in this country.

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