This is a really majestic diving site that has been around for a very long time. Located off the shores of Vanuatu, the Million Dollar Point happened to be the dumping site of many American vehicles – including bulldozers, trucks, jeeps, and other machinery used during World War II.
When the war ended, they no longer had use for everything, so it went here. The locals assumed that the troops had gone insane based on this decision alone. Naturally, so many abandoned vehicles that just sunk into the sea bed became an optimal diving site for tourists and locals alike.
Underwater Statues, Cancun
Jason DeCaires Taylor wanted to combine his many skills and talents to produce a new art that was both useful and unique. He integrated his skills as a sculptor, photographer, marine conservationist, and licensed diving instructor, and he came up with works that are considered among the 25 wonders of the world.
The underwater statues in Cancun serve both as an art, which would, later on, develop into a coral reef. It has also become a popular tourist destination, like most of his other projects in the first public sculpture park in the Caribbean Sea.
The Titanic
The tragedy of the RMS Titanic may have later on inspired Hollywood producers to create films surrounding its failed maiden voyage, but the subject remained a taboo for most of the twentieth century. Its accidental collision with an iceberg in 1912 caused more than 1,500 people dead, and British citizens rather avoided talking about it as if hastening to overcome the grief associated with it.
It took many decades to discover the wreck, and it wasn’t an easy undertaking. Robert Ballard and his team of explorers finally found its phantom 12,000 feet underwater, but only after so many attempts had failed, costing millions of dollars. It still remains at the bottom of the ocean albeit split in two; its bow and stern about a third of a mile apart.
The Silfra Crack
What a feeling it must be to swim in between the growing gap of North America, and Europe. This widens by 2 cm each year, and a tension is created that causes the Silfra itself, and the valley; between the tectonic plates that are regularly relieved through earthquakes.
Rocks and large boulders fall to form caves deep within these schisms, because of the movement of the land, and divers love to visit this spot for a chance to explore its exceptionally clean water, and for the thrill to be in between continental plates. The Silfra Crack is located in Iceland.
The SS Umbria
You might be wondering why some kind of angel-shaped model has sunk to the bottom of the sea. But bear with us. This is actually a starboard propeller of the SS Umbria. This cargo ship, which was built in Germany, sailed all over the globe, traveling through Europe and even to Argentina. The ship fell into the hands of many countries over the years.
In 1940, under the control of Italy, it secretly contained thousands of tons worth of military equipment, including bombs and detonators upon its arrival at British-controlled Port Said. When World War II started, the British had the ship anchored and did an inspection. The British ended up forcing the Umbria to anchor at Wingate Reef close to Port Sudan, where it would eventually sink. Nowadays, it is one of the most popular wreck dives in the world.