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Revision 1/25/2013 9:17 AM by LatitudeAdjustment
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Latitude: 17° 27.864’ N Longitude: 62° 59.648’ W

From SportDiver Planet’s 50 Greatest Dives, #21 The current is slight, but enough to attract an army of horse-eye jacks marching across the starboard side of the 320-foot-long Charlie Brown wreck, a former cable-laying ship now lying sideways in 95 feet of water off St. Eustatius’ southwest coast. At this depth, any warm-water pelagic — Caribbean reef shark, bull shark or eagle ray — might make a cameo. On your descent, thanks to dependably epic visibility, you can take in the wreck’s entirety at once. Prior to becoming an artificial reef, the vessel was made safe for penetration; along some of the passageways, light is visible throughout, so even those with limited wreck training can enjoy the experience. And with depths from 50 to 100 feet, divers of all levels can enjoy the rush. — BM

http://www.sportdiver.com/photos/planets-50-greatest-dives?cmpid=enews011713&PodID=030&spMailingID=14460532&spUserID=NzY5MDMwNzA0OQS2&spJobID=210377095&spReportId=MjEwMzc3MDk1S0

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sint_Eustatius