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Special dinner served by locals from the dive resort at Pulau Panaki, Raja Ampat, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Asia

Tourist dive boat moored by white sand Bira Beach at far South resort town, Tanjung Bira, South Sulawesi, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Asia

Full moon at Murex Bangka Dive Resort, Bangka Island, near Manado Sulawesi, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Asia

Full moon at Murex Bangka Dive Resort, Bangka Island, near Manado, Sulawesi, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Asia

Full moon at Murex Bangka Dive Resort, Bangka Island, near Manado Sulawesi, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Asia

Full moon at Murex Bangka Dive Resort, Bangka Island, near Manado, Sulawesi, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Asia

A waiter serves cocktails in Taha'a island resort, French Polynesia. Motu Mahana palm trees at the beach, Taha'a, Society Islands, French Polynesia, South Pacific.

A couple of spotted ratfish (male and female), also known as chimaera, on a night dive in the shallow waters of God's Pocket resort (British Columbia, Canada)

Green turtle (Chelonia mydas) with ship holder (Remora remora), dive site House Reef, Mangrove Bay, El Quesir, Egypt, Red Sea, Africa

Hemprich's tree coral (Dendronephthya hemprichi) and backlit diver, Fury Shoals reef dive site, Red Sea, Egypt, Africa

Vacation holidays adventure concept background, tropical island and long-tail boat with snorkeling set. Thailand

Information board of the diving school, Hotel Anthony's Key Resort, Roatan, Honduras, Central America

Boat jetty, wooden jetty in the sea at sunset, Selayar Dive Resort, Selayar Island, South Sulawesi, Sulawesi, Indonesia, Asia

Sven Brunso catches air while skiing Delirium Dive at Sunshine Village Ski Resort in Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada.

A snorkeler dives on a healthy hard coral reef near Two Tree Island off Kadavu Island in the southeast corner of Fiji, Fiji

Clown triggerfish, Balistoides conspicillum, Indonesia, Wakatobi Dive Resort, Sulawesi, Indian Ocean, Bandasea

lionfish, turkeyfish over sea grass, Pterois volitans, Indonesia, Wakatobi Dive Resort, Sulawesi, Indian Ocean, Bandasea

Yellowfin damsel, Neoglyphidodon nigroris, Indonesia, Wakatobi Dive Resort, Sulawesi, Indian Ocean, Bandasea

Yellowfin damsel, Neoglyphidodon nigroris, Indonesia, Wakatobi Dive Resort, Sulawesi, Indian Ocean, Bandasea

Schooling Crescent-tail bigeyes, Priacanthus hamrur, Indonesia, Wakatobi Dive Resort, Sulawesi, Indian Ocean, Bandasea

Splendid Dottyback, Pseudochromis splendens, Indonesia, Wakatobi Dive Resort, Sulawesi, Indian Ocean, Bandasea

Tara Pacific expedition - november 2017 Zero wreck, vertical view Orthomosaic from 3D photogrammetry (13500 x 10000 px). D: 15 m Kimbe Bay, papua New Guinea, Coral growth on this wreck is from a period of 74 years ! The ZERO, is a Japanese WW2 fighter plane wreck. This Zero wreck was discovered in January 2000 by local William Nuli while he was freediving for sea cucumbers. He asked the Walindi Plantation Resort dive team if they might know what it was, and when they investigated they uncovered the intact wreck of a Zero fighter, resting on a sedimented bottom in 15 m depth. This World War II Japanese fighter is almost completely intact. The plane is believed to have been ditched, the pilot is believed to have survived, but was never found on the island. He never returned home. Maybe he disappeared in the jungle? On 26th December 1943, during the battle of Cape Gloucester, the Japanese pilot made an emergency landing, ditching his Mitsubishi A6M Zero plane into the sea approximately 100m off West New Britain Province. The plane was piloted by PO1 Tomiharu Honda of the 204st K?k?tai. His fate is unknown but it is believed the he made a controlled water landing after running out of fuel and survived. Although he failed to return to his unit, the plane was found with the throttle and trim controls both set for landing and the canopy was open. There are no visible bullet holes or other shrapnel damage and the plane is still virtually intact after over 70 years underwater. It is a A6M2 Model 21 Zero, made famous for its use in Kamikaze attacks by the Japanese Imperial Navy. The wreck has the Manufacture Number 8224 and was built by Nakajima in late August 1942.

Tara Pacific expedition - november 2017 Kimbe Bay, papua New Guinea, Zero wreck: Coral growth on this wreck is from a period of 74 years ! D: 15 m The ZERO, is a Japanese WW2 fighter plane wreck. This Zero wreck was discovered in January 2000 by local William Nuli while he was freediving for sea cucumbers. He asked the Walindi Plantation Resort dive team if they might know what it was, and when they investigated they uncovered the intact wreck of a Zero fighter, resting on a sedimented bottom in 15 m depth. This World War II Japanese fighter is almost completely intact. The plane is believed to have been ditched, the pilot is believed to have survived, but was never found on the island. He never returned home. Maybe he disappeared in the jungle? On 26th December 1943, during the battle of Cape Gloucester, the Japanese pilot made an emergency landing, ditching his Mitsubishi A6M Zero plane into the sea approximately 100m off West New Britain Province. The plane was piloted by PO1 Tomiharu Honda of the 204st K?k?tai. His fate is unknown but it is believed the he made a controlled water landing after running out of fuel and survived. Although he failed to return to his unit, the plane was found with the throttle and trim controls both set for landing and the canopy was open. There are no visible bullet holes or other shrapnel damage and the plane is still virtually intact after over 70 years underwater. It is a A6M2 Model 21 Zero, made famous for its use in Kamikaze attacks by the Japanese Imperial Navy. The wreck has the Manufacture Number 8224 and was built by Nakajima in late August 1942.