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Reasons for diving wrecksA shipwreck is attractive to divers for several reasons:
Wreck diver training and safety
Image:Shipwreckporthole.jpg Diver with porthole recovered from a shipwreck in New York's Wreck Valley: Shipwreck Expo Many diver training organizations provide specialist wreck diver training courses, such as PADI Wreck Diver, which divers are advised to take before wreck diving. Such courses typically teach skills such as air management and the proper use of guidelines and reels. Other organizations, such as BSAC, however do not separate wreck diving from other types of diver training and expect the standard training programme (at a suitably advanced level) to deliver the skills required for wreck diving. The Nautical Archaeology Society teaches awareness of underwater cultural heritage issues as well as practical diver and archaeological skills. Other organizations, such as the Artificial Reef Society of British Columbia (ARSBC) deliberately create artificial reefs to provide features for divers to explore, as well as substrates for marine life to thrive upon. Protection of wrecksImage:Wreck diving hms hazardous.jpg A notice proclaiming the protected status of HMS Hazardous near Portsmouth, England In many countries, wrecks are legally protected from unauthorized salvage or desecration. In the United Kingdom, three Acts protect wrecks:
See also
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