See The Great Barrier Reef
The only living organism that can be seen from outer space, the Great Barrier Reef is a real-life paradise.
The Great Blue Hole is just that… a great blue hole. A giant marine sinkhole off the coast of Belize, it attracts scuba divers from all around the world to its transparent waters.
Full of fish, intrigue and wonder, the hole lives in the Lighthouse Reef which offers so much to explore. Inside the hole itself are thousands of stalactites which show how it was once lived above water as a cave.
One reason to get a move on is that it’s predicted this sinkhole won’t be around forever. As more and more sand falls into it each day, it’s described an ‘underwater hourglass’ that is slowly filling up.
However, because of its depth, the Great Blue Hole is recommended to only be dived by those with experience. Its nickname of “diver’s cemetery” might give you a clue as to why.
The underwater sinkhole is the world's largest of it's kind. Measuring a whopping 318 metres wide and 124 metres deep.
In 2018, scuba divers set off to discover the secrets of the hole. At the bottom, beneath layers of toxic hydrogen sulfide, past which no life existed, was an eerie calm. Also a few bodies of the lives the hole had previously claimed.
Scientists believe that the hole used to be a cave which was formed 14,000 years ago. After the Ice Age, as things melted, the cave became flooded and collapsed and left behind the sink hole.
The only living organism that can be seen from outer space, the Great Barrier Reef is a real-life paradise.
Witnessing these incredible creatures in their natural habitat is a privilege few get to experience.
Great White's JAWS hold 7 rows of razor sharp teeth and hunting instincts that pre-date dinosaurs! Brave enough to take a dive with them now?