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.1. Bottle Site :: 5-25m For hundreds of years ships have
been anchoring in the shallow sheltered water on the western side of The Rock. |
| .2. Pilot Bone :: 32m. |
.3. Mount Olivet - 22-22m. Known locally as the inner and outer, this
steel clad steamer broke into two after several attempts to lift it. |
.4. Cannon Pile :: 27m A large collection of steel cannon
believed to have come from a Spanish siege barge. |
.5. S.S. Excellent :: 30m. This steel clad steamer sank after a collision in 1888. Lying upside down, she has three access
points. The iron prop lies on the seabed. |
.6. Italian Chariot :: 33m. There isnt much left of this
chariot after it was mistaken for a torpedo and blown up. It is believed to have been the chariot that broke down on Buster
Crabb. |
| .7. Mui :: 35m. Wreck |
.8. Helen :: 21m. Spanish fishing vessel which is every divers idea of what a wreck looks like, she sits on her
keel with easy access to the wheelhouse. Excellent photo opportunity. |
| .9. Pilot Boat :: 22m. |
.10. S.S. Rosslyn :: 21m. A very scenic wreck dive. Lying
at the bottom of the South Mole, she is fairly broken up but many pans are recogniseable. Excellent for photography. |
|
.11. Aircraft :: 35m. Bristol Bombay bomber which ditched shortly after the second
world war. |
| .12. Mortar Ball Site :: 39m. |
| .13. Rosia Bay |
.14. Seven Sisters :: 0-20m. Photographers: this group of rocks has a profusion of marine life. |
.15. Five Wreck :: 20m. All these boats were scuttled including a 30m steel Dutch
barge to encourage marine life. Can be incorporated into Seven Sisters dive. |