Chuuk Lagoon in Micronesia
Destination: Pacific Ocean, Micronesia, Chuuk Lagoon
The Chuuk Lagoon, often known as Truk Lagoon, offers an amazing underwater world for divers to meet and explore. This lagoon's diameter is of about 40 miles while reaches depths of as much as 300 feet. This water extension contains a wide variety of sea creatures for visitors to discover as well as some of the most famous wrecks of the world.
Chuuk Lagoon's waters hide a famous wreck that consists on a combination of ships, planes and submarines in such an amount that in total they add more than 100. This way, divers who enjoy meeting wrecks would be able to have a great time while diving in Chuuk Lagoon's waters, since they could meet a great amount of wrecks which can be observed almost next to each other.
The wrecks hidden in Chuuk Lagoon are known as the most important underwater museum of the entire world due not only to the great amount of ships, planes and submarines it contains but also to the water clarity in which they can be observed. Besides this, these wrecks are also very interesting due to the fact that they are part of the world history since they are the result of a World War II battle between Allied planes and the Japanese Imperial Fleet.
Chuuk Lagoon's wrecks have also become an attraction due to the great amount of corals and marine creatures which have created their homes and habitats in them. This way, along with the wrecks themselves, divers can also meet a great variety of interesting marine creatures and observe the way in which the nature has mixed with these artificial elements, providing a very interesting picture to the human eyes.
There is a very wide variety of marine creatures and formations for divers to meet while diving in Chuuk Lagoon, among which we can name sponges, soft corals, anemones, jacks, tunas and groupers among others. Besides this, and due to the great amount of wrecks the lagoon hides, these wrecks are very close from each other which allow divers to visit a great amount of them without having to move far away each time.
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